The Basement
The fork in my hand felt like it weighed a pound.
It wasn’t the steak. It wasn’t the chandelier. It wasn’t the crystal glasses catching the light like little spotlights aimed at my face.
It was the table. The long, polished, too-perfect mahogany table in my sister Madison’s dining room, where everything was always staged like a catalog spread. The flowers in the center weren’t “flowers,” they were an arrangement. The napkins weren’t “napkins,” they were linen folded into sharp, silent judgment.
Madison sat at the head like she owned the air. She always had. Three years older, three inches taller in heels, and a lifetime of acting like her success was a favor she performed for the family.
My mother dabbed at the corners of her mouth, careful not to smear her lipstick. My father carved his prime rib the way he did everything: quietly, precisely, like it was beneath him to struggle with anything. My brother Tyler was half-present, thumb scrolling on his phone. Madison’s husband Marcus poured himself another glass of red wine and didn’t bother pretending it was for “pairing.”
Madison set her fork down with a little click.
“So,” she said, voice syrupy. “Emma.”
My name sounded like she was about to scold a dog.
“Marcus and I have been talking. We need to discuss your living arrangement.”
There it was. That tone. Same tone she used when we were kids and she wanted Mom to know I’d stepped on her territory. Same tone at my college graduation when she announced her engagement during dessert. Same tone at my wedding reception when she leaned in and whispered, congratulations, you finally caught up.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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