ADVERTISEMENT
Behind the modern glass doors of my clinic, tucked away in a corner of the parking lot where the ivy begins to reclaim the asphalt, sits a 2003 Honda Civic. It is a rusted, non-functional relic with a heater that died during the Obama administration, but I refuse to tow it away. To the patients of the Second Chance Community Clinic, it is just an old car. To me, Shelby Bennett, it is a monument to the coldest night of my life—the night I discovered that in the house of a Marine, love was not a biological right, but a currency earned through total submission.
The domestic raid had started over a phantom smell. Gerald claimed to detect something “acrid” on the second floor. He didn’t ask questions; he conducted a sweep. I wasn’t worried. I was an honor roll student whose only rebellion was the occasional sharp-tongued retort. But when he yanked open my desk drawer, he pulled out a sandwich bag filled with dried green plant matter.
ADVERTISEMENT