Handcuffed At A Family Barbecue, She Was Exposed As A General-nga9999 - Chainityai

Handcuffed At A Family Barbecue, She Was Exposed As A General-nga9999

My cousin handcuffed me at our family Memorial Day barbecue because he wanted everyone to see me as the family problem.

He wanted the cousins watching from the lawn chairs, the kids by the pecan trees, my uncle at the grill, and my mother on the porch to believe he had finally done what they had all been doing quietly for years.

Put me in my place.

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The backyard smelled like charcoal smoke, sweet barbecue sauce, and grass that had been cut too close to the dirt that morning.

Grease popped on the grill.

A speaker near the porch played low country music with a buzz in the bass, the kind of cheap outdoor speaker that always sounded like it had already survived two storms and one family argument.

My grandmother’s house sat at the end of a gravel driveway with a mailbox that leaned a little toward the road.

A small American flag hung from the porch rail because it was Memorial Day, and my grandmother liked the flag visible for holidays even when she forgot what the holiday actually cost some people.

Kids ran between folding chairs.

Red plastic cups sweated in the heat.

My uncle kept lifting the grill lid, letting smoke roll out in thick gray clouds like the ribs needed an audience.

I had come because my grandmother asked me to come.

That was the simple version.

The truer version was that I had spent too many years letting my family tell themselves I stayed away because I thought I was better than them, and some stubborn part of me still believed showing up mattered.

I wore jeans, old sneakers, and a pale blue T-shirt that still had a soft crease across the front from being folded too long.

I brought a pan of cornbread, set it on the end of the table, and listened while my aunt made a joke about whether I had checked it for Army rations.

Everyone laughed.

I smiled the way you smile when you are tired of teaching grown people the same lesson.

Derek Lawson arrived after noon wearing a dark deputy shirt even though he was not on duty.

That was Derek’s favorite kind of outfit.

Official enough to intimidate people.

Casual enough to pretend he was just family if anyone challenged him.

He slapped my uncle on the back, grabbed a soda from the cooler, and looked me up and down like my presence had interrupted something he owned.

“Well, look who made time for us,” he said.

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