The longer they stay, she tells me, the harder it will be for her to leave me. And this is the right thing to do, she says. She and Dad have decided it will be good for me, to spend time with my family.
I think she sounds like she has been crying too, but I don’t want to know if that’s true.
Once she leaves the room, I lie flat and stare at the chandelier above my bed. This is a room for a princess, and I am anything but that.
What am I?
A lump of heaviness. A stranger. A thing that does not fit.
I can’t seem to stop the poison inside me from spreading.
(I mean, I’ve never been poisoned, so I am only speculating.)
(But I do feel something spreading inside me. Something heavy and dark.)
I can’t let them see it.
They can’t know my secret. Not these people in this clean, white palace. Not even Mom and Dad know. And they never will.