Sister Mocked Her At Homecoming Until One Badge Silenced The Room-ngyen

My sister picked up the rhinestone microphone as though she were about to bless the whole room with warmth.

She had always been good at that first look.

The pretty smile.

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The careful pause.

The little tilt of her head that told people she was about to say something charming, when really she was choosing where to place the knife.

Three hundred people sat beneath the ballroom lights, all plates and polished glasses and expensive perfume that tried to cover the smell of nerves.

It was meant to be a homecoming dinner.

Family, old neighbours, former classmates, a few local faces who liked being seen at the right tables.

Lauren had made sure everyone knew she was hosting.

She had made sure everyone knew her husband was there in uniform.

And she had made sure I was seated just close enough to the front for everyone to see me when she finally turned the room in my direction.

“Rachel’s always been the quiet one,” she said into the microphone.

There was a soft chuckle, because people knew that tone.

They had heard it at birthdays, weddings, garden parties, school reunions and family lunches.

It meant Lauren was only joking.

It meant I was expected to smile.

“She just types emails for a living,” she added.

The laughter grew.

I kept my hands in my lap.

A waiter moved behind me with a tray of glasses, and the ice inside them made a neat, cold sound.

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