The old vanity in Lydia’s childhood bedroom had once been a thing of beauty. Its mirror, now cloudy with time, had reflected her dreams when she was young. She had imagined a future full of warmth, where love was freely given, where she wasn’t just tolerated but cherished.
But the house had never been a home. The furniture, elegant but cold, was much like the family that owned it—beautiful on the surface but empty beneath. Words of affection were sparse, replaced by criticism disguised as concern. Lydia had spent years trying to please them, to carve a space for herself in their rigid world, but the edges were too sharp, and she was tired of bleeding.