My parents hosted Sunday family dinners twice a month in their wide, immaculate suburban home in Columbus, Ohio—the kind of place where every chair matched and every framed photo looked more genuine than the people inside it. My brothers, Ryan and Caleb, were there with their wives. My younger sister, Lauren, had brought her twins, who were smearing mashed potatoes across their faces while everyone called it adorable.
I sat halfway down the table in a navy blouse from Target, trying to look like I belonged in a family that had spent twenty years treating me like the typo in their perfect sentence.
My name is Emily Parker. I am thirty-four, divorced, a public school counselor, and the only one of my siblings who didn’t choose a career my father could boast about at church or on the golf course. Ryan was a surgeon.
Caleb owned a growing construction company. Lauren married a financial advisor and posted coordinated holiday pajamas every December. I worked with teenagers who cried in my office, had panic attacks in school bathrooms, or showed up to class hungry.
My father called it “babysitting with a master’s degree.”
That night, he had already taken three shots at me before dinner plates were even cleared.
“So, Emily,” he said during the main course, cutting his steak with exaggerated precision, “still saving the world one feelings chart at a time?”
Ryan snorted. Lauren stared down at her plate. My mother gave me that familiar tight smile that meant, Please don’t ruin dinner by reacting to your father humiliating you.
I kept my tone even.
“Actually, one of my students got into Ohio State this week.”
Dad waved his fork dismissively. “Wonderful. Maybe one day one of them will grow up to have a real profession.”
The table laughed—not because it was funny, but because in my family, laughter was a reflex for survival.
Dad stood, raising his glass, soaking in the silence he always demanded.
“I’m proud of all my children,” he announced, smiling at Ryan, then Caleb, then Lauren. He let the pause linger as every eye shifted toward me. “Except the loser sitting at the table.”
Everyone laughed.
Something inside me went completely still.
I stood up, reached into my purse, and placed a thick manila envelope next to his plate.
“For you, Dad,” I said.
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