My name is Nathan Carter, and the night my family finally saw my younger brother for who he really was started with a paper plate of potato salad and a cheap plastic cup of sweet tea in my hand. The backyard of my parents’ house in Arlington, Texas, smelled like charcoal, lighter fluid, and my dad’s famous hickory-smoked ribs. Kids ran between lawn chairs with popsicles melting down their wrists.
My mom’s Bluetooth speaker pushed out old rock songs my dad liked to pretend he was too dignified to enjoy. It was one of our regular Sunday evening BBQs, something we’d been doing since we were kids—same grill, same folding tables, same family traditions that were supposed to mean stability. I was standing near the grill, turning skewers of vegetables, when my younger brother, Jacob, clinked his plastic cup with a spoon.
“Everybody, shut up for a second,” he shouted, grinning so wide his dimples were showing. “I’ve got an announcement.”
My mother, Linda, hurried over from the kitchen door, still wearing her apron. My father, Tom, wiped sauce off his fingers and stepped closer.
Our aunts and uncles drifted out of their conversations and formed a loose semicircle around Jacob, like they always did whenever he decided to be the center of attention. I stayed where I was, hand on the grill tongs, the heat rising up against my forearm. “My younger brother bragged during the family’s regular BBQ party, ‘I just got promoted to manager.’”
I didn’t flinch when he said it.
“I just got promoted to manager of a five-star hotel,” my younger brother announced, raising his glass as if it were proof of divine favor. “Well, you’re forever just a loser.”
My parents laughed, a proud, sharp, dismissive sound. Then they turned to me and shook their heads, that familiar tsk slicing through my ribs.
“Unlike someone,” my dad added, almost under his breath, but loud enough for me to hear. I smiled—slow, controlled. “Actually,” I began.
But before the truth, there was a story, one only I knew. There was a time I believed we were on the same side, me and him. The elder brother who taught him to ride a bike on the cracked sidewalk in front of our house, who ran behind him until my lungs burned, who patched scraped knees in the bathroom with Spider-Man bandages and rubbed his back when he cried over math homework.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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