Broken Glory, Stolen Childhood / Chapter 1: A Childhood of Shadows
Broken Glory, Stolen Childhood

Broken Glory, Stolen Childhood

Author: Martin Graves DVM


Chapter 1: A Childhood of Shadows

Next →

From the moment I was born, my mother was in my ear every single day.

Even as a baby, it felt like her voice seeped into every corner of our tiny apartment, always following me, filling up the air. Sometimes I wondered if even the apartment was tired of hearing her. I think I learned the sound of her disappointment before I learned any words at all.

"Quinn Delaney, you killed your uncle. You owe Hailey a life. You’ll spend your whole life making it up to Hailey."

She said it with a flat certainty, like it was gospel. She said it so often, it settled into my bones. Sometimes she’d mutter it when she thought I was asleep, sometimes she’d hiss it right in my ear while she braided my hair, her fingers tight and sharp.

To help me "atone," my mother secretly handed my aunt a $15,000 check as a kind of payoff or settlement when she remarried, all behind my dad’s back. After my aunt transferred custody of her only daughter, Hailey Chen, to my grandparents, she brought Hailey to our house. My mother made me, just eight or nine months old, kneel in front of Hailey and apologize.

It was the kind of thing that, if you told someone, they’d think you were making it up. I mean, what sense did it make? But there I was, a wobbly baby in a faded onesie, pushed to my knees on the threadbare carpet, my mother holding me upright by the shoulders, muttering apologies I couldn’t even form. The grown-ups all hovered, faces tight, watching me like I might somehow pay a debt I didn’t understand.

But I couldn’t even understand words at that age, and I especially liked to pinch people. Not long after three-year-old Hailey was brought in front of me, I pinched her little arm until it turned purple.

I was just a baby. No one ever told me not to pinch. And Hailey’s chubby arms were right there. I remember her shriek—sharp, startled—and the way everyone in the room froze for a split second before chaos broke loose.

Hailey cried out in pain, calling for her mom. My mother couldn’t comfort her, so she just kept smacking my tiny hand over and over.

The slaps were quick, stinging. My mother’s face twisted with something dark. I remember thinking she looked like a stranger. She hit my hand until it went numb, and the whole time, Hailey’s cries echoed through the house, high-pitched and wild. Even now, sometimes I swear I can hear them in my dreams.

"It’s not enough that you killed your uncle and torment me every day, now you even dare to pinch Hailey! You’re a curse, a child of sin, born just to bring me trouble. What good are you?"

Her words bounced off the walls, louder every time. I never knew what to do with the shame she pressed on me, not even old enough to walk.

Whenever Hailey was in pain, someone would comfort her. But when my hand hurt and I cried even harder, my mother ignored me. She even found my crying annoying, picked up Hailey, and left me alone at home.

The house would fall silent after they left, except for my own wailing. Sometimes the TV would be on in the background, cartoons blaring for no one. I’d crawl to the window and watch the dust motes spin in the sunlight, wishing someone would come back for me.

When my dad came home from his shift at the factory, I was lying on the floor, my face blue and unconscious.

He dropped his lunchbox right there in the doorway, keys clattering to the floor. I can only imagine the terror in his eyes—his baby sprawled on the linoleum, limp as a rag doll. He scooped me up, yelling my name, his voice cracking with panic.

My dad panicked and rushed me to the ER. The doctor said I’d fainted from holding my breath—nothing serious, just don’t let me cry too hard in the future. But my right thumb was broken. Even though they set the bone, my thumb might never straighten again.

I picture the fluorescent lights of the ER, the doctor’s tired face as he explained, my dad clutching my tiny hand. The cast was too big for my arm, my thumb a crooked little question mark for the rest of my life. My mother didn’t come to the hospital.

When my dad got home, he lost his temper, asking my mother how long she planned to torment us. My uncle’s death was an accident—his family was already ruined, did she have to break up our family too?

His voice, usually so steady, cracked like thunder that night. My mother just sat on the edge of the bed, arms folded, eyes hard as stone. The air in the apartment felt brittle, like one wrong move would shatter everything.

My mother didn’t argue. She just kept crying and repeating the same thing: "My brother was killed by Quinn Delaney. What’s wrong with making her pay for it?"

She rocked back and forth, clutching a dish towel, tears streaming down her cheeks. She said it like a mantra, as if repeating it enough times would make it true, would make her pain less sharp.

Seeing my mother was unreasonable, my dad filed for divorce and fought for my custody. My mother wouldn’t give in. She kept telling the judge that I broke my thumb myself, that she could never hit her own child, that no mother in the world didn’t love her child. After her explanation, and because she was breastfeeding, the judge finally awarded me to my mother, and my dad had to pay child support.

The courtroom was cold, the judge’s voice distant, almost bored. The courtroom smelled like old paper and coffee. My mother dabbed at her eyes with a tissue, playing the part of the wounded mother. My dad’s jaw was clenched so tight I thought his teeth might crack. In the end, the law sided with her—because I was small, because she was my mother, because the world expects mothers to love their children.

After the divorce, my dad was very upset and often tried to collect evidence of my mother’s abuse. Maybe my mother was wary, so she rarely hit me after that, and even if she did, she was very careful. Hailey got the bed. I slept on the floor. She bought Hailey new dresses, animal crackers, chocolate milk, and dolls, while I could only play with whatever Hailey didn’t want. If I so much as touched anything she hadn’t given up, Hailey would scream.

The floor was cold and hard, the smell of dust and old socks always in my nose. I’d watch Hailey twirl in her new dress, clutching a doll, while I curled up under a threadbare blanket, pretending not to care. I learned early to make myself small, invisible.

My mother would rush over and teach Hailey to hit my head. "Who told you to bully Hailey! Hailey, if she bullies you again, you hit her. If you hurt her, she won’t dare next time!"

She’d crouch down to Hailey’s level, her voice syrupy sweet, then turn to me, eyes flashing. It was like I was invisible. Hailey’s small fists would land on my head, and my mother would nod approvingly, as if she were teaching her daughter to ride a bike.

But Hailey was weak, and when she hit me, it didn’t make any noise like my mother’s slaps. So she felt it wasn’t enough and switched to twisting my arm and biting my hand. Every time, my mother would clap and cheer. "That’s right, doesn’t matter how, as long as it hurts her. Hailey, you’re great!"

Sometimes Hailey would look up, seeking my mother’s approval, and the two of them would share a smile. I learned to hide my hands behind my back, to flinch at sudden movements, to stay quiet so I wouldn’t make things worse.

When Hailey got tired of twisting me, my mother would get annoyed by my crying and lock me on the concrete back porch, starving me for a meal to "teach me a lesson."

The back porch was always cold, even in the summer. The paint was peeling, the boards warped. I’d huddle on an old mat, hunger gnawing at my belly, listening to the sounds of dinner drifting through the walls. The porch light flickered, casting strange shadows. I’d press my forehead to the glass, hoping someone would remember me.

Being beaten and bitten hurt, and being hungry was also hard to bear. I complained to my dad, who took me to confront my mother. My mother said, "Did I burn her with an iron or whip her? Is a slap abuse? What parent doesn’t lay a hand on their kid? Two kids fighting—she can’t beat Hailey, so it’s my abuse? If you don’t agree, go sue. See if the judge sides with you or me."

She stared him down. Daring him to try. He clenched his fists, knuckles white, but he didn’t say another word. I could feel the disappointment rolling off him, heavy as lead. The car ride back was silent, the air thick with things neither of us could say.

My dad was speechless, and that was the end of it. Because he didn’t see me often, my dad remarried within two years. We saw each other even less, and gradually grew apart.

His new wife, Aunt Melissa, had a polite smile and watchful eyes. They had two boys, my half-brothers, who grew up in a house where laughter was easy and dinner was always hot. I became a shadow, a voice on the phone once or twice a year.

I was taught to be obedient by my mother and Hailey. I no longer liked little dresses, animal crackers, chocolate milk, or dolls. All this I learned much later from my dad; I have no memory of it.

He told me, and it felt like someone else’s story. I couldn’t picture myself in pink frills or clutching a doll. My world was chores and silence, not playrooms and snacks.

All I remember is that I never went to preschool, and at seven, I went straight into first grade. Not long after starting school, my classmates started calling me a weirdo because I never played with them or talked to them.

The other kids laughed and ran across the playground, their sneakers flashing in the sunlight. I wanted to join them, but I didn’t know how. I sat on the edge of the blacktop, tracing patterns in the dust, always on the outside looking in. Their voices sounded far away, like a radio in another room.

Actually, it wasn’t that I didn’t want to—I just didn’t dare, and I didn’t know how. Since I could remember, my mother made me atone to Hailey. She locked me at home to do laundry, cook, and mop the floor. I could only see outside through the window. No one ever taught me how to say "hi" to other kids. I only knew that every time I touched Hailey’s things, she’d tattle to my mother, and then I’d get hit on the head and locked on the porch to go hungry.

The world beyond the glass seemed bright and unreachable. My hands smelled like dish soap and bleach. The other kids’ laughter made my chest ache, but I didn’t know how to join them. I was always afraid that if I tried, I’d just get hurt again.

The teacher spoke to my mother twice about this. My mother, who sold pancakes out of a food truck in the Walmart parking lot, got angry at being disturbed and, without asking anything, hit my head in front of the teacher and twisted my ear to question me.

The teacher’s eyes went wide. My mother didn’t care. She yanked me by the ear, her voice sharp as a slap: "Why don’t you play with your classmates? Are you sick?" The whole class went quiet, staring. I wished I could disappear into the floor.

I had no answer. I also realized I was different from other kids. Maybe I really was sick.

I stared at my shoes, heat burning in my cheeks. The word "sick" clung to me, sticky and humiliating. I started to believe it. Maybe there really was something wrong with me.

Next →

You may also like

He Stole My Song, Then My Voice
He Stole My Song, Then My Voice
4.8
Betrayed by my childhood friend and silenced by trauma, I watched him hand my song—and my secret love—to the campus queen for her own glory. When I fought to reclaim what was mine, they called me jealous and unworthy, all because I can’t speak. But with the help of the mysterious senior who knows my pain, I’ll expose their lies and prove that even the voiceless can make the world listen.
He Traded Me for His Childhood Love
He Traded Me for His Childhood Love
4.8
After seven years of sacrifice, Shannon’s world shatters when her politician husband replaces her with his ex—her children cheering him on. Betrayed by the family she built, she’s forced to fight for her dignity, her inheritance, and her mother’s legacy. When the divorce is announced on her own front porch, will she walk away broken—or rise to claim the freedom and revenge she deserves?
Her Mother’s Love Was a Lie
Her Mother’s Love Was a Lie
4.7
Shellie brags about a perfect home and a loving mother, but her frayed clothes and empty lunch tray tell another story. When her secret unravels in a brutal, public betrayal, even her desperate loyalty can't save her from the truth: the only thing more painful than hunger is a mother’s rejection. Now, as her former classmate, I can’t stop chasing the ghost of the girl we all broke, even if it means facing what I did to her.
Abandoned by My Son, Reborn for Revenge
Abandoned by My Son, Reborn for Revenge
4.8
On her son's eighteenth birthday, Maggie's world shatters as he publicly wishes for her to disappear—and years later, she dies alone, discarded by the family she sacrificed everything for. But when she wakes up in her younger body, Maggie refuses to beg or break again. This time, she’ll claim her freedom, expose their betrayal, and make them regret the day they pushed her away.
Stolen Sons: Sold After My Mother’s Murder
Stolen Sons: Sold After My Mother’s Murder
4.8
Caleb watched his mother die and was dragged into a nightmare, ripped from home with his little brother and sold to strangers who erased their names. Eighteen years later, he returns to the town that betrayed him, haunted by the memory of the day his family was shattered and the brother he lost in the darkness. Some scars never fade—and Caleb will risk everything to uncover the truth, no matter who must pay.
Inheritance of Broken Promises
Inheritance of Broken Promises
4.9
A triumphant young woman’s victory is upended by a televised confrontation with her birth family, forcing her to defend her true father and reclaim her narrative. As public spectacle turns to personal reckoning, Autumn’s courage exposes old wounds and paves the way for both herself and her estranged sister to break free from cycles of abandonment and sacrifice.
His Secret Girlfriend for Seven Years
His Secret Girlfriend for Seven Years
4.8
For seven years, I loved America’s hottest pop star in silence—always his secret, always called by another woman’s name. On my birthday, he humiliated me in front of Hollywood’s elite, making it clear I was just a stand-in for his first love. But now, with my hearing restored and my heart shattered, I’m ready to expose every lie and take back the life—and the music—he stole from me.
Sold to My Childhood Enemies
Sold to My Childhood Enemies
4.9
My parents tried to save us by marrying me off to one of the boys I grew up with—but they humiliated me, rejecting me at the dinner table like I was nothing. When I was kidnapped by the same kids who once called me family, only Marcus—the one who hurt me most—came to my rescue, drawing me into a cruel game of fake love and brutal betrayal. I thought he wanted to heal me, but it was all a bet—my heart was just another prize for the boys who broke me.
Reborn to Ruin the Golden Girl
Reborn to Ruin the Golden Girl
4.7
Natalie destroyed my life, then watched as the world cheered her on. Now I've woken up in my old body, seconds before her cruel trap—and this time, I'm not here to play victim. The rich and powerful wrote the rules, but I’ll make them bleed for every lie, even if it turns me into the monster they always claimed I was.
Broken Promises, Burning Vengeance
Broken Promises, Burning Vengeance
4.8
A gripping tale of revenge, trauma, and healing set in the world of celebrity, as a woman infiltrates her sister’s tormentor’s life, only to find herself torn between love and justice. The story explores the devastating effects of bullying, the complexity of guilt and forgiveness, and the enduring scars left by betrayal.
Thrown Out by the Golden Boy
Thrown Out by the Golden Boy
4.8
After a car accident, Savannah’s beloved golden boy wakes up despising his fishmonger wife and their daughter, erasing years of love with a single cold glance. Humiliated and penniless, Mom can’t even speak to defend herself as the rich Foster family cheers for her replacement—a perfect Southern belle who’s waited years to steal her place. But as secrets simmer and old bruises surface, I promise to be my mother’s voice and expose the darkness beneath Savannah’s polished smiles—no matter who I have to take down.
Broken Roots, Unbreakable Dreams
Broken Roots, Unbreakable Dreams
4.9
Abandoned as a child and raised by a tenacious adoptive mother in rural America, Autumn Brooks overcomes hardship, betrayal, and the weight of small-town prejudice to become the pride of her family. Through grit, sacrifice, and love—both loud and silent—she forges her own path to academic and personal triumph, ultimately repaying her family’s faith with a new home and a future full of hope.