Lauren had not planned to make Christmas about money. That was the first thing she would tell herself later, when everyone tried to rewrite the evening into a story about her temper. She had planned to deliver pies, roasted vegetables, and one sealed envelope.
She had planned to sit down for one meal without checking invoices, oven timers, or bank balances. She had planned, foolishly, to be a daughter for a few hours instead of the quiet financial emergency contact everyone used and no one thanked. By late afternoon, suburban Ohio had gone hard and silver with December cold.
The roads were dry, but snow crusted along the gutters, and every house on Diane’s street glowed with wreath lights and kitchen warmth. Lauren drove with the heat blasting against her ankles and the smell of apple pie filling the passenger seat. Her hands were raw from washing bakery pans.
There was flour in the seam of her coat cuff that she’d given up trying to brush out. Her bakery had opened at five that morning, because Christmas customers did not care whether the owner had a family dinner to attend. They wanted pumpkin pies, cinnamon rolls, sugar cookies shaped like mittens, and the two dozen dinner rolls Mrs.
Alvarez had ordered three weeks in advance. Lauren had made every order herself. By eleven, her shoulders ached.
By noon, her hair smelled like butter and yeast. By one-thirty, she was boxing the last paid order and doing math in her head about whether she could close early without losing someone’s repeat business. Then Diane called.
“Don’t forget the envelope,” her mother said. Not Merry Christmas. Not drive safe.
The envelope. Lauren looked toward the office drawer where the December mortgage payment sat folded behind a bakery supply receipt. “I have it,” she said.
Diane exhaled like the world had just corrected itself. “Good. And bring those pies you mentioned.
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