My Sister Called Me Staff, Then The Venue Contract Answered Her-Aurelle - Chainityai

My Sister Called Me Staff, Then The Venue Contract Answered Her-Aurelle

I knew the birthday folder was serious before Bianca opened it.

She carried it into my parents’ dining room with both hands, like the future of our family name had been laminated and tabbed by color.

There were cream invitations, little gold table numbers, flower samples, menu proofs, fabric swatches, and a seating chart printed on thick paper.

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My mother leaned over the pages and tapped one polished nail beside a picture of white orchids.

“Elegant,” she said, as if elegance were a moral category.

Tristan nodded beside her with his serious face, the one he used whenever he wanted expensive taste to look like wisdom.

Dad complained about parking because that was his way of participating without risking emotion.

I sat in the same chair I had used since I was thirteen and ate carefully, listening to them discuss Bianca’s birthday like a diplomatic summit.

I had not received an invitation.

For a while, I made excuses for that.

Maybe family was assumed.

Maybe the thick paper and gold edges were for friends.

Maybe after all the years of arriving early, staying late, watching dogs, picking people up, fixing other people’s messes, I finally did not have to ask whether I counted.

Bianca kept smoothing the seating chart.

The folder had a place for every detail except me.

When there was a pause, I asked what the dress code was.

My voice came out light because in my family even a harmless question could become evidence that I did not know my place.

Bianca’s fingers stopped.

Tristan looked up from his phone.

Mom smiled with her mouth and not with her eyes.

“Dress code?” Bianca repeated.

She made the words sound small and silly.

“Why would you need the dress code, Nora?”

For one second, I waited for someone normal to enter the room through one of their bodies.

I waited for Mom to say obviously I was coming.

I waited for Dad to grunt something clumsy but decent.

I waited for Tristan to remember that a joke can stop before it becomes a wound.

Nobody moved.

The silence corrected me.

Bianca slid one sample invitation toward me, then drew it back before my fingers reached it.

“Actual invitations went out weeks ago,” she said.

“Designed ones.”

I looked at Mom.

“I didn’t get one.”

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