She Refused Her Sister the Vacation House. Then Police Came-heuh

“The party is cancelled. The lawyer is coming,” my father said on my birthday.

For one second, I thought I had misheard him.

The music was still playing from the ceiling speakers, soft and bright and completely wrong for the way the room had gone still.

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The pool lights glowed blue beyond the tall windows.

Vanilla candles burned along the kitchen island, mixing with the smell of catered appetizers, champagne, and the faint chlorine drifting in through the cracked patio door.

It was supposed to be my thirtieth birthday.

It was supposed to be a night where nobody asked me for anything.

Then my father lifted his hand like he was quieting a courtroom.

“Everyone, leave,” he said. “This party is over.”

Nobody moved at first.

My cousin had a paper plate in one hand and a tiny fork in the other.

My aunt was holding a champagne flute halfway to her mouth.

One of my mother’s friends slowly lowered her phone, like even recording would make her responsible for what was happening.

Kristen stood beside my father with her arms folded across her chest.

She was my younger sister by four years, but she had never really lived like a younger sibling.

She lived like the family’s emergency.

If Kristen was late, someone waited.

If Kristen was broke, someone helped.

If Kristen was careless, someone explained it away.

And if Kristen wanted something from me, my parents called it love until I handed it over.

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