Grandma’s Stolen Cello Turned a Pool Party Into a Reckoning-Cherry - Chainityai

Grandma’s Stolen Cello Turned a Pool Party Into a Reckoning-Cherry

My parents “borrowed” my 11-year-old daughter’s antique cello “for safekeeping.” Weeks later, we walked into Grandma’s music room — the corner was empty, and outside a $87,000 hole for my sister’s kids’ new pool was filling with water.

Mom hissed, “Don’t you dare tell your grandmother.”

I said nothing at first.

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That was not mercy.

That was documentation.

The day it started, my parents’ house smelled like lemon cleaner, fresh paint, sawdust, and the kind of panic people try to hide under home improvement.

Lucy climbed out of my SUV with her black music binder tucked under one arm and her rosin tin rattling in the front pocket.

She had worn her school hoodie even though the day was warm, because the music room was always cooler than the rest of the house.

Grandma insisted on that.

Humidity mattered, she said.

Respect mattered more.

The little American flag on my parents’ porch clicked against its pole as we walked up the front steps.

Lucy looked toward the driveway like she expected Grandma’s old sedan to be there.

“Do you think Great-Grandma came by?” she asked.

“Not today, bug,” I said.

Grandma had moved into a senior apartment six months earlier after her hip started giving her trouble.

She still came over for music days when she could, but mostly she trusted me to bring Lucy, unlock the room, check the humidifier, and make sure nothing careless happened.

That last part keeps me awake now.

Carelessness would have been easier to forgive.

What happened was not careless.

My parents were not sentimental people unless sentiment benefited them.

My mother could cry over a graduation photo and then ask who was paying for dinner before the waiter reached the table.

My father believed money spent on my sister Ashley’s family was “help,” and money spent on mine was “spoiling.”

I was the useful daughter.

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