Some Doors Require Invitation
As told by Alicia Bennett
When I opened my front door that Tuesday afternoon, my brain spent three full seconds trying to make the scene ordinary. A stack of cardboard boxes beside my sofa. A black duffel bag slouched near the coffee table.
A pair of white sneakers on my entry rug that did not belong to me. A pale denim jacket draped over the back of my dining chair as if it had always been there, as if the person who set it there had every reason to assume the house would accept them. Then I saw my sister’s name written on one of the boxes in thick black marker.
RACHEL. The letters were large and blunt and somehow more offensive than spray paint. For one strange second, all I could hear was the mechanical hum of my refrigerator.
The house was quiet in the wrong way. Not empty, not peaceful. Claimed.
“Alicia?” Rachel’s voice floated out from the hallway, too casual, too comfortable with the space. She stepped into view wearing black leggings and a faded gray t-shirt, barefoot on my hardwood. Her expression when she saw my face flickered, but not with guilt.
With inconvenience. I had come home early enough to disrupt whatever version of this she had planned to present. “Oh,” she said.
“You’re home early.”
I looked past her toward the hallway. “Why are your things in my living room?”
She lifted one shoulder. “Mom said I could stay here.”
Not a request.
Not even an apology shaped like a sentence. An announcement dropped into my foyer like a package I hadn’t ordered. Before I could respond, my mother appeared from the hallway carrying a folded cream-colored blanket from my linen closet.
My blanket. She wore the expression she used when she had already decided the moral high ground belonged to her and the rest of us were simply late to understanding it. “You’re home early,” she said.
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