By the time my brother raised his glass, my house had already become his victory speech.
The dining room smelled like buttered rolls, beer, and grocery-store frosting. The ceiling light made every fork flash like something sharp, and the yellow congratulations banner sagging over the fireplace dipped low in the middle, as if even it could not quite support the weight of the evening. My brother’s name was written across a sheet cake in blue frosting. JAKE. Big block letters. A small plastic house sat near the corner of the cake, tilted slightly in a swirl of icing grass.
I still had my coat on. My suitcase was not beside me. My keys were not in my hand. The only thing I carried into that room was silence.
Jake leaned back in my father’s recliner with one ankle resting on his knee, wearing a sport coat he did not quite fill and the grin of a man who believed he had finally become the version of himself our parents had been describing for years.
“Sold your little house for three hundred thousand,” he said, lifting his beer as if proposing a toast to common sense. “Honestly, Sarah, you should be relieved.”
The room brightened with applause.
My mother clapped with both hands pressed close to her chest, eyes shiny with pride. My father nodded the way he always did when Jake spoke, as if every sentence had already been approved by a committee of fathers somewhere. My aunt Carol smiled at me with soft pity. Three cousins at the table laughed because laughter is what people do when they do not know whether a family joke is funny or dangerous.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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