At dinner, Dad raised his glass. “Congrats, here’s your car, son.” Then he looked at me. “Rent’s due.
$900 by Sunday. You’re an adult now.” I asked, “Why did I pay while he gets rewarded?” He said, “Because he’s worth it.” So I packed, left, and left a note on the fridge. Now my brother’s panicking, my mom’s screaming, and my dad’s calling every number he can.
My name is Elizabeth. I was twenty-four years old, and by the time I finally understood exactly what my place was in my family, I was already old enough to walk away from it. The moment didn’t come during some screaming fight or dramatic scene in the front yard.
It came quietly, over cake and wine and applause, at my brother Ryan’s college graduation dinner in my parents’ suburban backyard. The house was full of people that night. My mother had invited relatives, neighbors, old church friends, and two women from her yoga class she barely even liked.
String lights glowed over the patio, white folding chairs were lined up in neat rows, and the long table was dressed in white linen and blue flowers like we were hosting a wedding instead of a graduation dinner for a man who had taken six years to finish college. My father stood up and tapped his spoon against his wineglass. The chatter died immediately.
He smiled at Ryan with a softness I had spent my whole life waiting to see turned in my direction. Then he reached into his pocket, pulled out a set of shiny silver keys with a black remote fob, and held them up. “Congrats, son,” he said.
“Here’s your new car.”
The whole table erupted. People clapped. My mother cried.
Ryan shot up from his chair so fast it nearly tipped backward. “No way,” he yelled. He looked like he had just won something enormous.
Maybe, to him, he had. He hugged my father. My mother pressed both hands to her chest like she was watching some beautiful family movie she had always wanted to star in.
I clapped too. I probably clapped louder than anyone for the first two seconds, because for all our differences, I really did love my brother. I always had.
Then my father turned toward me. The warmth left his face so quickly it felt deliberate. He reached into his pocket again, but this time he didn’t pull out a gift.
He pulled out a folded sheet of yellow legal paper and slid it across the tablecloth until it stopped beside my hand. He lowered his voice so the guests still standing nearby wouldn’t hear. “Rent is due Sunday,” he said.
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