When My Father Chose My Brother's Debts Over My Cancer Surgery-mdue - Chainityai

When My Father Chose My Brother’s Debts Over My Cancer Surgery-mdue

The pie was still warm when I stepped into my parents’ kitchen, and that was the first warning.

Susan did not bake because she loved feeding people.

She baked when she wanted a room to smell innocent before she did something cruel.

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The apple pie sat cooling on the island beside a tan envelope from my oncologist’s office, and the sight of those two things together made my stomach tighten before anyone spoke.

My father, Thomas, stood at the sink with his sleeves rolled up, pretending he had been interrupted in the middle of an ordinary day.

My mother watched me with a soft smile that never reached her eyes.

My brother, Ethan, sat at the table with his shoulders hunched, a $900 watch flashing on his wrist every time his fingers twitched.

He looked hungover.

He also looked scared.

That should have mattered to me, but fear had been Ethan’s favorite currency since we were children.

He spent it, lost it, and expected me to cover the bill.

I was twenty-nine years old, bald from treatment, and down to eighty-eight pounds on my worst mornings.

The chemo port under my skin made every hug feel like a negotiation with pain, and the tumor near my lung had pushed my surgery from urgent to immediate.

The last $65,000 I had was not a cushion.

It was oxygen.

It was rent during recovery, medication after surgery, transportation to appointments, and the thin financial line between fighting for my life and becoming another sad story people whispered about after church.

Susan tapped the envelope once with her red fingernail.

“Your brother made a mistake,” she said.

I looked at Ethan.

He would not meet my eyes.

Thomas cleared his throat like a judge beginning court.

“He owes people,” he said.

I waited.

Nobody in that house ever called Ethan’s disasters by their real names if there was a softer word nearby.

Gambling became stress.

Theft became borrowing.

Lying became panic.

Violence from the men he owed became an unfortunate situation that somehow required my bank account.

Ethan reached into his hoodie pocket and tossed a photo onto the counter.

It slid across the granite and stopped by my mug.

In the picture, I was leaving the oncology clinic with a scarf tied over my bare head and one hand pressed lightly near my port.

The person who took it had been close enough to catch the exhaustion around my mouth.

“They know where you go,” Ethan said.

The room seemed to shrink around that sentence.

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