There was a time when Serena believed her family was unbreakable.
Sunday mornings smelled like pancakes and laughter. Her father would hum off-key in the kitchen while her mother pretended to complain about the mess he made. Serena would sit at the counter, swinging her legs, convinced that nothing in the world could touch them.
They were happy.
Not perfect — but warm. Real. Whole.
Until the silence started.
It began with small arguments behind closed doors. Whispered conversations that stopped when Serena entered the room. Her father started working later. Her mother stopped humming.
Then came the night Serena heard a glass shatter.
“You never listen!” her mother cried.
“I’m tired of being the only one trying!” her father shot back.
Serena stood in the hallway, heart pounding. She had never heard their voices like that before. Angry. Sharp. Strangers.
The house that once felt safe began to feel fragile.
Days turned into weeks of tension. Dinners were quiet. Smiles were forced. The warmth faded.
Until one evening, they sat her down.
“We think it’s better this way,” her father said gently.
“Better for who?” Serena whispered.
The divorce happened quickly after that.
Her mother moved into a smaller place. Her father rented an apartment across town. Serena packed her things into two separate bags — one for each parent — like she was dividing herself down the middle.
She tried to be strong.
But every goodbye felt like losing something permanent.
Her mother struggled the most.
Bills piled up. Calls were ignored. The sparkle in her mother’s eyes dimmed.
And Serena felt responsible.
When arguments started about money and pride, when her parents refused to speak to each other except through lawyers, Serena did what she had always done.
She tried to fix it.
She arranged accidental meetings. It reminded them of old memories. Shared stories from one parent to the other.
It didn’t work.
Instead, things grew worse.
Blame shifted. Anger hardened.
And eventually, Serena became the quiet center of their storm.
“We can’t keep dragging her through this,” her father said one day.
“She needs stability,” her mother agreed, exhausted.