Forks were not supposed to sound like gunshots. In our house they usually sounded like routine, tines against ceramic, the small domestic percussion of a family eating dinner together. But the night my mother finally said what she had apparently been rehearsing, her fork hit the table with enough force to make the oak tremble and the glasses shiver, and the sound cut through the dining room the way a verdict cuts through a courtroom.
Everything that came before it was suddenly irrelevant. “You have forty-eight hours,” she said, her voice very clear. “Forty-eight hours to get your things out.
That house is your sister’s now.”
I sat across from her in the Burlington house I had been maintaining for five years, in the chair I had pulled up to this table ten thousand times, and I watched my mother’s face and waited for the sentence to rearrange itself into something that made sense. It did not. My father was looking at his plate with the fixed attention of a man who has decided that a half-eaten piece of chicken is the most interesting object in the room, and his silence, which was its own complete statement, filled the space where a father’s voice should have been.
My sister’s chair was empty. She was in California, as she had been for four years, as she was for most things that required presence or effort. I said, “You can’t be serious.”
My mother’s laugh was brief and entirely certain.
“Oh, I am.”
My father nodded once, slowly, at his plate. I got up without a scene. My chair scraped the floor I had refinished two winters ago when the old wood warped badly enough that you could feel the buckle through your socks.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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