Her Family Mocked Her Online Shop Until The Christmas News Aired-Quieen - Chainityai

Her Family Mocked Her Online Shop Until The Christmas News Aired-Quieen

I arrived at my parents’ house on Christmas evening with a fruit basket in my hands.

It was the plain kind from the front of the grocery store, wrapped in clear plastic with a little red bow taped to the top.

Nothing fancy.

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Nothing meant to impress anyone.

The plastic crinkled against my coat sleeve as I walked up the driveway, and the cold December air had already made my fingers stiff around the handle.

Through the front window, I could see the soft yellow light of the living room, the shadow of the Christmas tree, and the football game flickering silently on Dad’s TV.

A small American flag leaned from the porch bracket beside the door, the same one Dad put out every summer and forgot to bring in until the first snow.

It looked a little faded now.

So did a lot of things in that house.

I was reaching for the doorbell when Rebecca’s leased BMW turned into the driveway behind me.

Her headlights swept across the mailbox, across my coat, across the basket in my hand.

She parked like she was arriving at a charity event where cameras might be waiting.

My sister stepped out in a cream coat, her hair smooth, her lipstick perfect, her boots clean enough to look unused.

Then she opened her trunk.

Inside were glossy gift bags, perfectly wrapped boxes, gold ribbons, tissue paper, and the kind of holiday abundance that made people say, “You shouldn’t have,” while making sure everyone noticed that she had.

She looked at my fruit basket.

Then she looked at me.

“Oh, Emma,” she said with that soft little smile she saved for family gatherings. “Still keeping it simple, I see.”

I smiled back.

“Merry Christmas, Rebecca.”

She didn’t answer.

She reached into her trunk for another gold-ribboned box and walked toward the house like she had already won something.

That was Rebecca’s way.

She never had to be openly cruel when polished would do.

She never had to insult you directly when concern could carry the blade.

Inside, the house smelled like apple pie, coffee, cinnamon candles, and roasted turkey cooling under foil.

Mom’s pie sat on the counter by the sink.

Dad’s football game was muted in the living room.

Aunt Linda hovered near the sweet potato casserole like she alone had been appointed to protect it from disaster.

My cousins stood near the fireplace with red plastic cups in their hands, laughing at something that stopped the moment I entered.

Not stopped exactly.

Softened.

That is how people behave when your name was in the room before you were.

“Emma, sweetheart,” Mom said, stepping forward with a careful hug. “We weren’t sure if your projects would keep you busy tonight.”

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