Hours later, I found myself in the kitchen, the faint smell of chlorine clinging to my skin. I couldn’t shake the sense of unease that had settled deep within me.
Each time I closed my eyes, I relived the moment she pushed me, a memory that played on a loop in my mind.
Despite the warmth of the summer evening, there was a chill in the air, an unspoken tension that lingered between me and my mother.
She moved around the kitchen, washing dishes with a deliberate focus, avoiding eye contact.
It was as if the incident in the pool hadn’t happened, as if she could wash away the gravity of her actions along with the soap suds.
I watched her, waiting for some acknowledgment, some explanation.
But the silence stretched on, a taut thread that neither of us dared to cut.
The distant relative who had pulled me from the water had left soon after, offering a brief, reassuring squeeze of my shoulder before disappearing back to the fringes of family gatherings.
Their presence had been a balm, a reminder that kindness could come from unexpected places.
Yet, as grateful as I was, it couldn’t fill the void left by my mother’s actions.
