She Was Mocked as the Family Beggar. Then Her Phone Rang.-mdue - Chainityai

She Was Mocked as the Family Beggar. Then Her Phone Rang.-mdue

“Here comes the family beggar. Hide your wallets,” my aunt said the second I stepped inside her front door.

I was holding an apple pie when she said it.

That is the detail I remember most clearly.

Image

Not the chandelier, though it was bright enough to turn the polished floor into a mirror.

Not the smell of roast beef and vanilla candles coming from the dining room.

Not even Tyler’s laugh, though that sound followed me around for months afterward whenever I thought of that night.

I remember the pie.

The foil pan was still warm against my palms, and the crust had shifted a little in the passenger seat on the drive over.

I had made it myself because my uncle River liked apple pie and because, despite everything, I still showed up to family dinners trying to be decent.

That was my mistake for a long time.

I kept confusing decency with permission to be used.

My aunt Carolina stood in the entryway wearing a beige dress, a gold bracelet, and the kind of smile that needed an audience.

Behind her, relatives turned their heads.

Some laughed right away.

Some gave the small embarrassed smile people use when they want cruelty to pass quickly so nobody asks them to take a side.

And Tyler laughed the hardest.

My cousin had always laughed like he owned the room.

Loud.

Clean.

Confident.

He had never learned the kind of laugh that checks for damage afterward.

“Come on, Lauren,” he said, lifting his whiskey glass from beside the bar. “You know Aunt Carolina’s just joking.”

I looked at him.

He was wearing a dark blazer and a watch he had made sure everyone noticed before dinner.

His hair was neat, his shoes were polished, and his whole body had that loose arrogance of a man who believed every door would open if he leaned on it hard enough.

“Of course,” I said.

That was how I survived in that family.

I let them think I was smaller than I was.

Carolina had decided years earlier that I was the cautionary tale.

I was the divorced niece.

The woman who had started over.

The one who drove a practical car and brought homemade desserts and did not spend Thanksgiving explaining resort upgrades or new leather seats.

She liked to remind people that her family knew how to get ahead.

By that, she usually meant Tyler.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *