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Chapter 6 by rockyboy150 rockyboy150

What is Crystal planning ?

Crystal left for L.A

The following days were a tense, silent vigil. Dad barely left the hospital, camping out in a chair in Mom’s room, a grim sentinel watching for any sign of her return. I was discharged, but home felt wrong, empty and echoing. Tabitha and David tiptoed around, asking quiet questions I couldn’t answer. They’d seen “Mom” once, when the Jennifer persona was briefly, blessedly in control. She’d been weepy, confused, and desperately hugged them, which only made things more terrifying when she slipped away again.

Crystal’s appearances were unpredictable. Sometimes she’d be there when I visited, holding court with a shocking lack of filter, complaining about the hospital food (“Is this gelatin or a biological experiment?”) and flirting shamelessly with the younger orderlies. Other times, it would be Mom, fragile and scared, begging to know what was happening to her. The doctors called it “consciousness cycling,” and said it might stabilize. We were all clinging to that “might.”

Then, on the fifth day, I came to the hospital after school to find Dad standing in the empty room, the bed neatly made, a nurse nervously gathering the last of the personal effects.

“Where is she?” I asked, a cold knot forming in my stomach.

Dad’s face was a mask of controlled fury. In his hand, he clutched a piece of hospital stationery. He thrust it at me without a word.

The handwriting was a looping, bold script that was nothing like Mom’s neat print.

Donny & Kids –

Don’t have a coronary. The docs say I’m physically healed enough, and let’s be real, my mental state is a unique butterfly they can’t keep in a jar. My manager, Rick, finally tracked me down. (Genius, using Jennifer’s old socials to DM me. This body’s name still has credit lines, honey!) There’s a studio in L.A. that’s willing to work with my “new look” – think of it as a comeback tour with a much more suburban aesthetic. A three-day shoot. Big money. Money this lovely but boring housewife’s checking account desperately needs, FYI.

I’ll bring back souvenirs. Try not to miss me too much.

Crystal

P.S. Jenny says to tell you she’s sorry and she loves you. She’s currently sulking in the backseat of my mind. It’s a long drive to California!

I stared at the note, the paper trembling in my hand. She’d left. She’d checked herself out, with the help of some sleazy manager, and just… left. To go shoot a porn movie. In my mother’s body.

“The discharge paperwork was already signed,” Dad said, his voice dangerously quiet. “By her. They said she was compos mentis, rational, and insisting on her right to leave. That… that manager had a lawyer on speakerphone. The hospital’s hands were tied.” He finally looked at me, and the raw anguish in his eyes was worse than the anger. “She took the minivan, Tim. Your mother’s minivan. The one with the ‘Proud Soccer Mom’ bumper sticker. She’s driving it to Los Angeles to… to…”

He couldn’t say it. He slammed his fist against the doorframe, a single, sharp crack that echoed in the sterile hallway.

The drive home was silent. The house, when we entered, felt like a crime scene. We gathered in the living room—Dad, me, David, Tabitha. I read them the note. Tabitha started crying. David just stared out the window, his face blank, his dyed-black fringe hiding his eyes.

“What do we do?” Tabitha whispered.

Dad sank into his armchair, the one Mom always said he’d worn a permanent dent into. He looked utterly defeated. “We wait,” he said, his voice hollow. “We wait, and we hope that when she… when Jennifer… is in control again, she can get herself out of whatever situation that woman is getting her body into.”

The unspoken horror hung in the air: What if Jennifer wasn’t in control during the shoot? What if Crystal was? The thought of my mother’s face, her smile, her body, being used that way, while she was a helpless prisoner inside her own mind, made me physically ill.

Later that night, lying in bed, my phone buzzed. An unknown number. A text message, followed by an image.

The text read: Don’t worry, I’m being a good girl. Mostly. Rick says the “milf next door” thing is GOLD. See you soon, stepson. ;)

The image was a selfie, taken in what looked like a garish hotel room. Crystal, wearing one of Mom’s comfortable old cardigans over a lace camisole she’d definitely rummaged from Mom’s drawer, was grinning at the camera, holding up a tiny script. The title, clearly visible, was “The Neighborhood is Watching.”

I threw my phone across the room. It hit the wall with a sickening crack. I lay there in the dark, listening to the silence of the house, imagining my mother’s minivan speeding across the desert toward a neon-lit nightmare, with a stranger wearing her skin and a head full of fantasies that were about to become our family’s irreversible, living hell.

when will Jennifer be able to take control?

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