ADVERTISEMENT
“I didn’t even know there was a fire until the next morning.”
You could see that belief breaking inside him.
Mason looked at me again.
Silence settled between us.
Then he added, “If you want to report it now, I understand.”
I expected rage.
But mostly, I felt sad.
Sad that my mother had spent years blaming faulty wiring.
Sad that Caleb had carried guilt for almost a decade over something he barely understood as a child.
But before going home, we stopped at the police station.
I told the officers everything Mason had admitted.
Then I shook my head.
Because charges would not erase the scars.
They would not give me back the girl I had been before the fire.
They would not undo the years I spent shrinking beneath other people’s stares.
But walking into that police station did give me something.
The truth.
And for the first time in years, I understood that my scars were part of me, but they were not the whole story.
The fire had changed my life.
But it did not get to own it anymore.
ADVERTISEMENT