I based the rewrite on the story text you provided.
“Why aren’t you driving the Cadillac I gave you?”
The voice cut through the winter air like a blade.
I froze on the sidewalk, one hand gripping the handlebar of an old bicycle with a flat front tire, the other pressed protectively against my baby carrier. My son, Noah, was strapped to my chest, bundled in layers, his tiny face half-hidden against me. The formula at home was nearly gone. That was the only reason I had forced myself outside in the cold.
A black sedan had stopped beside the curb. Its rear window slid down, and my grandfather, Charles, stared at me from inside.
His eyes moved slowly from my exhausted face to Noah, then to the rusted bicycle beside me.
My husband, Daniel, was overseas serving in the military. While he was gone, I had been staying with my parents and my younger sister in my parents’ house in Portland. At least, that was what people thought.
The truth was different.
That house was not a home. It was a cage.
Every decision I made was questioned. Every dollar I spent was controlled. Every time I tried to care for Noah in my own way, my mother corrected me. My father looked away. My sister, Lauren, smiled as if everything I owned naturally belonged to her.
The Cadillac had been a gift from my grandfather after my wedding and Noah’s birth. A silver Cadillac, brand-new, meant to make life easier for me and my baby.
But I had never been allowed to touch the keys.
“You’re tired from giving birth,” my mother had said. “It’s better if Lauren drives it for now. Otherwise, it’ll just sit there.”