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I look at her legs. Her tights are snagged. A red scrape mars her calf.

“You’re injured,” I say. “That’s not fine.”

She rolls her eyes expertly.

“Come on.” I gesture toward the nearest side door. “Let’s get you inside before your grandmother sees blood and calls an ambulance.”

I brace for another eye roll or a sneer. Instead, her eyes go wide with panic as if she truly believes Brigitte would summon an ambulance over a scrape. Or maybe she’s just stunned by how lame my humor is.

Either way, she takes the arm I offer, careful not to lean too heavily. Together we make it to the wide hallway off the main staircase. No one’s around.

She exhales. “I can handle it from here.”

“Millie.” I give her a stern look. “Sit. I’ll get the first-aid kit.”

Her expression darkens. “I don’t need—” She lets out an exasperated sigh. “Just let me use my own, OK?”

She hobbles toward her room. I follow at a distance.

She reaches her door, opens it, and looks back. “You can come in. But turn around when I tell you to.”

“Sure.”

Her room is tidy. Books, posters, a stuffed sloth on the window seat.

She crouches by her desk and retrieves a compact medical kit from the bottom drawer. She flips it open with practiced hands.

I move toward the exit. “I’ll give you privacy.”

“You can stay,” she says quickly. “Just don’t look.”

“Wouldn’t dream of it.”

I plonk myself into the armchair by the door and study the ceiling. I hear her cleaning the scrape, unrolling bandage, packing everything back into the kit, and returning it to the drawer.

After a beat, she says, “You can look now.”

She’s sitting on the carpet, her injured ankle propped on a floor cushion. There’s a soft brace on it now. Her face is flushed.

“Sprained?” I ask.

“Lightly. It’ll be fine.” She narrows her eyes. “I’m riding in the Aymon Autumn Parade. Are we clear?”

“That’s up to your mom, Millie.”

She purses her lips.

I let the silence stretch.

Eventually, she breaks it. “I’m not clumsy.”

“I didn’t say you were.”

“But you think it.”

“No,” I say. “But I did wonder if you were hiding something. And now, I’m sure.”

She frowns. “What do you mean?”