Author: Tracy

Nobody had ever shown him how to do it. That was what lingered with everyone who saw it — the woman clutching her groceries who paused across the street, the elderly man walking his dog who suddenly couldn’t take another step, the teenager who lifted her phone to record and then slowly lowered it again because some moments refuse to be turned into content. Nobody had taught the boy to do what he did. He simply did it. Because he was five years old, and five is the age before the world has fully managed to explain all the reasons…

Read More

“Clara Mendoza walked into St. Gabriel Medical Center on a cold Tuesday morning in January carrying a small rolling suitcase, a wool sweater she had owned since her sophomore year of college, and the kind of exhaustion that does not come from one bad night but from months of learning how to keep moving while your life quietly caves in behind your ribs. The automatic doors opened with a hiss and let out a gust of over-heated hospital air that smelled faintly of antiseptic, coffee, and something metallic she couldn’t quite place. Outside, the sky over Austin was the pale,…

Read More

Part 1 You never planned to tell them. That was the strange, jagged truth of it. For nearly a year, you allowed your family to reside within the comfort of their favorite lie because, in a twisted, utilitarian way, it made the friction of existence easier to bear. They were permitted to worship your younger sister, Sarah, as the glamorous, golden savior who had miraculously “restored” the Vance family legacy, while you remained content in the shadows. You stayed on the periphery where no one expected anything from you except your silence, your infinite patience, and one more quiet act…

Read More

“We haven’t eaten in three days… and Lily won’t wake up,” my seven-year-old said from a stranger’s phone. That was sparking a des.per.ate rush to the hospital, where a heartbreaking discovery revealed their missing mother had been a hero all along. Just a few hours before, if anyone had asked what shaped my life, I would have given a carefully crafted answer – career advancement, high-stakes deals, the steady march toward partnership.  Not my children. Not because they weren’t my entire world, but because I had convinced myself that providing for them was the same as being present with them. …

Read More

“HELP ME—PLEASE—IT HURTS!!” The scream tore through the heavy afternoon air like a physical bl:ade. It was loud. It was raw. It was entirely impossible to ignore. The camera snapped—fast—panning toward a black SUV that was baking under the relentless, white-hot sun. Inside the pressurized cabin—a child. Sweating. Crying. Barely breathing behind the tinted glass. The world seemed to freeze for a jagged half-second as the onlookers processed the hor:ror. Then—movement. A young man stepped forward from the periphery, his eyes locked on the vehicle with a singular, terrifying focus. There was no hesitation in his stride. He grabbed a…

Read More

It’s her tenth birthday. She was really excited and always believed that her father would come back home and we would have a warm party together. The house was decorated with balloons lined the porch, pink and silver streamers stretched across the ceiling, and a three-layer vanilla cake topped with strawberries sat untouched on the table.  All her favourites. But nothing was better than her father. But Ava’s attention never left the front door. Just when I believed the day was completely ruined, a stranger knocked on our door holding a letter.  The very first line forced me to sit…

Read More

The stray dog lay in the rain with his chin resting on the skeletal remains of a broken crib, barely moving except for his eyes; when I finally stepped closer, the entire axis of my life tilted. It was nearly three in the morning, characterized by that specific Ohio rain that transformed the shoulder of Route 19 into a landscape of black mud and shivering silver puddles. I had just finished an grueling double shift at Maybell’s Diner, with exactly forty-three dollars in tips folded into my apron and the acrid smell of burnt coffee still clinging to my hair…

Read More

The emergency room felt too cold, too harshly lit, and too efficient for the kind of f.e.a.r tightening in my chest. One nurse carefully sliced through Lily’s leggings while another spoke softly to her in that steady, practiced tone professionals use when everything is one step away from chaos. Lily tried not to s.c.r.e.a.m, and that was the part that shattered me. She was in such intense pa!n that her entire body shook, and yet she kept trying to stay strong so she wouldn’t make things harder for me. When the doctor returned from radiology, he didn’t try to soften…

Read More

The digital chime of a text message severed the quiet of a Saturday morning at precisely 9:07. Your son’s party is cancelled. The sentence sat on my screen, flat and unapologetic, lacking the decency of an explanation or the grace of a question mark. It was a casual flick of the wrist from my father, as if he were rescheduling a lunch reservation rather than annihilating my son’s tenth birthday. For ten excruciating seconds, the world went silent, and I forgot the mechanics of breathing. Then, I forced myself to read it again, hoping for a typo that wasn’t there.…

Read More

My newborn was taken from me in the hospital because she was considered “imperfect.”  My husband’s family wanted my daughter d.e.a.d even if she was their blood. I thought nothing could be worse until my stepson quietly revealed a secret about what my husband had done to his first child.  The room fell silent, heavy and suffocating, and everything began to unravel. The nurse gently led Ethan to a chair, her hand resting softly on his shoulder, but his eyes never left mine – wide with f.e.a.r, glassy with tears, silently begging me to understand. His small fingers trembled as…

Read More