My family was planning to order takeout and asked my sister’s kids what they wanted. As my kids waited their turn, my mother coldly said, “Your kids can eat whatever scraps are left in the kitchen. They’re not guests here.” My sister smirked.
“And don’t forget, I’m staying all week, so you’re covering my meals, too.”
My dad added, “Now go set the table like a good little servant.”
I stayed quiet, took my kids to a fancy steakhouse instead, and made one phone call.
Hours later, they were calling me in panic.
I should have seen it coming.
The favoritism had been going on for years, but I kept hoping things would change.
I’m Noel, 34, a single mother of two amazing kids, Alyssa, 10, and Owen, 12.
My sister, Michelle, 36, has always been the golden child in our family’s eyes.
She married well, lives in a nice house, and somehow that made her children more worthy of love and attention than mine.
It was a typical Sunday afternoon when I drove to my parents’ house with Alyssa and Owen.
We’d been invited for what I thought would be a family dinner.
My parents, Robert and Linda, both in their early 60s, still lived in the suburban home where Michelle and I grew up.
The house that held so many memories, both good and increasingly painful.
Michelle was already there with her twins, Sophia and Mason, both 8 years old.
They were sprawled across the living room couch like they owned the place, tablets in hand, completely ignoring everyone else.
My kids stood politely by the door, waiting to be acknowledged.
“Oh, good.
You’re here,” Mom said without looking up from her phone.
“Michelle, honey, what do you and the twins want for dinner? I was thinking of ordering from that nice Italian place you love.”
Michelle barely glanced up from painting her nails a garish shade of pink.
“The twins want pizza, but make sure it’s from Tony’s, not that cheap place you usually order from. And I’ll have the seafood linguini with extra shrimp.”
“Of course, darling,” Mom said, already pulling up the restaurant’s menu on her phone.
“What about you, too?” she asked the twins, her voice suddenly warm and grandmotherly.
Sophia looked up from her tablet with the entitled expression I’d grown to despise.
“I want the pizza with extra cheese and pepperoni.”
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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