The party was already roaring by the time I showed up. I never intended to attend. I only learned about it because my cousin uploaded a video online: my parents beneath silver balloons, my brother gripping a microphone, relatives applauding inside the ballroom at the Lakeside Hotel in Chicago.
The exact same Lakeside Hotel whose deposit I had covered.
For months, my mother complained that she and my father could never afford anything meaningful for their fortieth anniversary.
She cried over the phone about how “ordinary people like us never get celebrated.” So I sent money. I paid for the venue. I handled the catering.
I even upgraded the flower package because my mother adored white orchids.
Yet somehow, I was the only child left off the guest list.
I stepped into the ballroom still dressed in work clothes, my laptop bag hanging from my shoulder. Conversations faded as people noticed me. My mother’s smile stiffened.
My father avoided my eyes. My brother, Nolan, stood beside the cake wearing the navy suit I had purchased for him three weeks earlier.
“Savannah,” my mother said tightly. “Why are you here?”
I looked around at the decorated tables, the champagne fountain, the photographer, the live band.
“I could ask you the same thing,” I replied.
“Especially since I apparently paid for a party I wasn’t invited to.”
Several relatives traded uncomfortable looks.
Nolan sighed dramatically. “Don’t make this into drama.”
“I’m asking a reasonable question.”
He walked toward me with the same careless confidence he had carried his whole life, the confidence of a man who never worried about rent because someone else always rescued him.
“You want the truth?” he asked loudly.
“Yes.”
“You’re just an ATM for the family.”
The room fell silent for a brief second.
Then my parents laughed.
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