Her Wedding Night Ended at Her Mother’s Door Covered in Bruises-luna

At 3:07 in the morning, someone pounded on my apartment door hard enough to make the chain tremble against the frame.

The sound tore me out of sleep before I understood where I was.

My bedroom was dark, the blinds still black, the air too cold where the blanket had slipped off my shoulder.

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For one second, I thought it was a neighbor.

Maybe someone had the wrong door.

Maybe someone had locked themselves out.

Then the pounding came again.

Not a knock.

A panic.

I stepped into the living room and saw the blue glow of the microwave clock spilling across the kitchen tile.

The apartment smelled faintly of old coffee and the lavender detergent I had used on the throw blankets that afternoon, before I left for my daughter’s wedding.

Her wedding.

That word still sat in my chest like something warm and fragile.

I had watched Sofia walk down the aisle less than twelve hours earlier.

I had fixed the little pearl comb in her hair.

I had kissed her cheek and told her she looked beautiful.

She had laughed and told me not to cry before the ceremony even started.

Then I opened my front door.

My daughter was standing in the hallway in her wedding dress.

For a moment, my mind would not accept the image in front of me.

The dress was the same one.

The same white gown I had helped button in a hotel dressing room full of hairspray, perfume, nervous laughter, and women holding paper coffee cups.

But now the skirt was torn near the hem.

One sleeve hung loose, the seam ripped open like someone had grabbed it.

The bodice was stained in dark, ugly patches.

Her makeup was gone except for gray streaks under her eyes.

Her lip was split.

One side of her face was swollen.

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Around both wrists were bruises so clear and dark they looked like fingerprints had been pressed into her skin.

I said her name, but it came out wrong.

Before I could reach for her properly, Sofia collapsed into my arms.

I caught her with both hands.

Her body shook against mine.

The tulle of her dress scratched my forearms, and her hair smelled like hotel shampoo, sweat, and tears.

“Mom,” she sobbed into my shoulder.

I held her tighter.

“Mom, my mother-in-law beat me because I wouldn’t give her my condo.”

There are sentences that do not enter the mind all at once.

They strike once as sound, then again as meaning.

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