When Her Sister’s Debt Came Knocking, The Offer Was Worse Than Money-tantan

The night Dominic Russo came to collect my sister’s debt, I was standing barefoot in my kitchen with a fork in my hand and a cold bowl of mac and cheese on the counter.

The apartment smelled like reheated pasta, old coffee, and the dry metal heat that came from a vent when the landlord had fixed it just enough to say it was fixed.

I had been trying not to cry over an overdue electric bill.

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That was the ridiculous part, looking back.

One piece of paper from the electric company had seemed like the worst thing waiting for me that night.

It sat beside my elbow, folded once, then folded again, as if making it smaller could make the number on it less real.

I worked long shifts at St. Agnes, picked up extra weekends when I could, bought store-brand groceries, stretched every tank of gas, and still found myself doing math at the kitchen table like math could somehow become mercy.

Across the living room, the television flickered blue over the furniture I had dragged home from thrift stores and curb alerts.

A laundry basket sat beside the couch, full of clean clothes that had been clean for three days and folded by nobody.

My old nursing textbooks were stacked under the window.

I had graduated three years before, but I could not bring myself to sell them because they reminded me that I had once believed effort made life move in a straight line.

On the couch, there should have been a blanket, one skinny arm hanging over the side, and my younger sister sleeping off another double shift at the diner.

That was the story Ava had given me.

Two doubles in a row.

Bad tips.

Mean customers.

Could she crash at my place again?

I had said yes before she finished asking.

That was what I did with Ava.

I said yes, then figured out the cost afterward.

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