My Sister Took Food From My Son, But I Paid For The Whole BBQ-ruby - Chainityai

My Sister Took Food From My Son, But I Paid For The Whole BBQ-ruby

By four o’clock, my parents’ backyard looked like every family barbecue people post about online and never mention honestly afterward.

The charcoal smoke had settled into the humid air, sweet sauce was burning at the edges of the grill, and the folding tables were lined with paper plates, red cups, buns, fruit trays, chips, and aluminum pans heavy enough to bend if you picked them up wrong.

Kids were running barefoot through the grass, their feet blackening from the patio, while the adults stood around pretending the afternoon was simple.

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It was never simple with my family.

There was always some small ranking system happening under the jokes, under the hugs, under the paper plates passed down the table.

My sister Bri never said she was the favorite, because she didn’t have to.

She had twins my parents bragged about like they were trophies, a husband who came and went depending on whether there was work, and the kind of confidence that comes from knowing somebody else will soften every consequence before it reaches you.

I had Eli and Nora.

Eli was six, quiet in the careful way children become when they have learned adults can embarrass them without warning.

Nora was eight, old enough to notice when people smiled at her cousins first and young enough to still hope that maybe this time would be different.

I told myself the day would be fine.

I told myself that because the food was paid for, because the kids were excited, because my mother had called twice that week to say how much it meant that everybody would be together.

She did not say, out loud, that the only reason everybody could be together over brisket, ribs, chicken, salmon, fruit, drinks, and enough sides for a graduation party was because I had paid for it.

That part stayed between us, just like most things stayed between us when they made my parents look better and me look invisible.

The night before, at 9:06 p.m., the Costco receipt had landed in my email.

It was $1,197.64.

I remember the number because I stared at it for a long time while sitting at my kitchen table, listening to my dishwasher run and trying not to calculate what else that money could have covered.

It could have covered part of my car insurance.

It could have sat in savings for the school clothes Nora would need before fall.

It could have stayed mine.

Instead, it became two briskets, racks of ribs, thirty pounds of chicken, Alaskan salmon, fruit trays, buns, chips, condiments, and every case of soda Bri had asked for because, in her words, “if we’re hosting, we should do it right.”

She said “we” the way people do when they mean someone else.

My mother had called me from the pantry on Tuesday, speaking low because my father was in the living room and pride was apparently easier to protect than my checking account.

“Your dad’s hours got cut again,” she said.

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