His Family Laughed At His Birthday Card. Then He Vanished With $40-nhu9999 - Chainityai

His Family Laughed At His Birthday Card. Then He Vanished With $40-nhu9999

On My 18th Birthday, My Brother Got A Surprise Party And A New Phone. I Got A Half-Eaten Cake And A Card That Said: “Be More Like Him.” Everyone Laughed. I Pretended It Didn’t Hurt. That Night, I Took The Bus To The City With $40 And A Backpack. A Week Later, My Mom Left A Voicemail In Tears: “Please Come Home… We Didn’t Know.”

For most of my childhood, I believed families did not have to say who their favorite was.

They showed you.

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They showed you in the way one kid’s mistake became a story and the other kid’s mistake became a character flaw.

They showed you in the way one kid got second chances and the other one got consequences.

They showed you in the pauses before they answered.

My younger brother, Mason, was sixteen and already taller than our dad.

He had the kind of confidence people call charm when it belongs to someone they already want to like.

Coaches called him a natural leader.

Teachers forgave his missing assignments because Mason smiled, promised to do better, and somehow remembered to ask about their weekends.

At family cookouts, he threw a football in the backyard while adults leaned against the fence and said he was going somewhere.

At school events, he walked through hallways like every door had already been opened for him.

I was different.

My name is Ethan Mercer.

At eighteen, I was the kid who got places early because being late felt dangerous.

I kept my grades high.

I washed dishes without being asked.

I took the trash out before Dad noticed it was full.

I learned how to close doors quietly when Mom’s mood changed in the kitchen.

Mason came home two hours after curfew and received a worried hug.

I came home eleven minutes late from the public library and lost my phone for a week.

When Mason backed our sedan into a concrete post outside a grocery store, Dad blamed the parking lot design.

Six months later, they helped Mason buy a newer car because, according to Dad, young men needed room to learn.

When I asked for a used laptop for college applications, Mom put a printed list of part-time jobs beside my cereal bowl.

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