“And you’re going to get it.”
We didn’t plan it.
Not really.
We just… knew.
Same face. Same height. Same voice.
Different souls.
We switched places before visiting hours ended.
She stayed behind in my gray sweater.
I walked out wearing her life.
Freedom didn’t feel soft.
It felt sharp.
Like stepping into sunlight after ten years in the dark.
The taxi ride to her house was quiet. I spoke in her voice—small, apologetic.
But inside?
I wasn’t afraid.
I was focused.
The house was smaller than I expected.
Peeling paint. Metal gate. Broken tile on the porch.
Details matter when you’re walking into enemy territory.
The door opened.
A little girl stood there.
Big eyes. Thin arms. Holding a worn stuffed rabbit.
“Mommy?” she asked.
I knelt.
She studied my face carefully.
Not like a child greeting her mother.
Like someone checking if today was safe.
That nearly broke me.
“Yes, baby,” I whispered.
She hugged me—but cautiously.
Like love came with conditions.
Inside, I met them.
Daniel’s mother. Sharp voice. Cruel eyes.
His sister. Smiling like she enjoyed watching things break.
And then Daniel came home.
He didn’t say hello.
Just: “You’re late.”
Ownership. Not concern.
I lowered my eyes like Marisa would.
For now.
I learned fast.
The house ran on fear.
Not loud, explosive fear.
Quiet, controlled fear.
The kind that becomes normal.
They insulted her. Controlled money. Watched every move.
And Daniel?
He was careful.
He didn’t rage in public.
He owned in private.
That night, I searched her room.
I found a notebook.
Dates. Bruises. Incidents.
Years of violence, written in neat lines.
But near the back, something changed.
Not just pain.
A plan.
Debts. Gambling. Pressure.
And one line, underlined so hard it almost tore the page:
“If I refuse, he’ll have me committed. He says my sister’s record proves insanity runs in the family.”
I froze.
That was the twist.
He wasn’t just abusing her.
He was planning to erase her.
Use me—my past—as the weapon.
He was going to lock her away…
Just like they did to me.
I didn’t sleep.
The next morning, I started training again in the yard.
Sofi watched me.
“Mommy… why are you strong now?” she asked.
I looked at her.
“Because nobody gets to scare us forever.”
She nodded like she understood.
Maybe she did.
I played the role for two days.
Quiet. Submissive. Careful.
Until Daniel made his move.
He brought out paperwork.
A property transfer. Her inheritance.
“Just sign,” he said.
“And if I don’t?” I asked softly.