The day everything changed

291 Words
The rain came without warning. It poured in heavy, unrelenting sheets, blurring the lights of the city into streaks of gold and gray. Inside the small, two-bedroom house on Willow Street, warmth and laughter had been the only shield against the storm—until the sound of breaking glass shattered it. “Clara!” Her mother’s voice was sharp, trembling. Clara Adams dropped the cup she was holding, her eyes darting toward the living room. Her father stood there, swaying slightly, his face pale, his right hand clutching his chest. “Dad?” Her voice cracked. For a heartbeat, everything slowed—the ticking of the wall clock, the smell of rain seeping through the curtains, the way her father’s gaze seemed to search for her face as though memorizing it. Then his knees buckled. “Call an ambulance!” her mother screamed. Clara’s fingers fumbled over the phone, her breaths coming in shallow gasps. By the time the paramedics arrived, the world outside was drowning in rain, and the world inside was drowning in silence. They worked over him—pressing, breathing, shouting—but when the lead medic finally looked up, Clara knew before he spoke. “I’m sorry… he’s gone.” The words slammed into her chest like a physical blow. Her mother collapsed into sobs. Her younger brother, Ben, just stared, frozen, his face blank. Clara felt the storm seep into her bones. Somewhere deep inside, a door closed, locking away the life she had before. She didn’t know it yet, but from that night forward, she would no longer just be the daughter. She would be the glue holding them all together—and glue always breaks under enough pressure. Outside, the rain kept falling. ---
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