Girl Served Scraps In A Dog Bowl At Dinner, Then The Camera Blinked-ngyen

By the time Mark opened his front door, Claire knew she should have listened to the quiet voice that had told her to stay home.

The house was warm in the way houses become warm when people are trying too hard.

Roast turkey, butter, cinnamon candles, polished glasses, folded napkins, all of it arranged like proof.

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Proof that this family still knew how to sit around a table.

Proof that no one had said the things they had said.

Proof that Claire was the difficult one for remembering.

Cold November air pushed against her back, and beside her, Lily stood in a cranberry-red dress with white tights and shoes polished that morning on the edge of the bath.

In both hands, she held a paper turkey she had made at school.

The feathers were cut from coloured card, uneven and bright.

Across the body, in purple pen, Lily had written, I am thankful for family.

She had asked three times whether Grandma would like it.

Claire had said yes each time because she had wanted it to be true.

Mark smiled from the doorway with the heavy confidence of a man who enjoyed having people in his house because it let him decide who counted.

“Look who made it,” he said, loud enough for whoever was inside to hear.

Before Claire could answer, her mother’s voice came from the kitchen.

“Dinner’s nearly ready. Try not to make it awkward, Claire.”

Lily’s fingers found Claire’s hand and tightened.

Claire looked down at her daughter’s little face, already uncertain, and hated herself for bringing her.

She had come because Lily had begged to see her cousins.

She had come because one bad year should not be allowed to take every family memory with it.

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