At Thanksgiving, He Mocked Me—Then His Five Payments Vanished-hihehu

Jacob had learned a long time ago that being dependable did not feel like being loved.

It felt like being assigned a job nobody remembered assigning.

He was thirty-five, clean-shirted, neatly shaved, and tired in the quiet way people get tired when they have been useful for too long.

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On Thanksgiving, the dining room smelled like roasted turkey, cinnamon, and candle wax.

The windows had gone dark by the time everyone sat down, but the table glowed under warm light, all polished glasses, folded napkins, and plates crowded with food nobody wanted to pass too loudly once the old family pattern settled in.

Lucas came late.

He always came late.

Not late enough to apologize sincerely, just late enough to make an entrance.

He stepped into the room with a smooth jacket, a quick grin, and the kind of confidence people forgave before he even explained himself.

Their mother, Eleanor, rose halfway from her chair when she saw him.

Their father smiled like the evening had finally started.

Jacob watched it happen with the dull familiarity of a man who had seen the same scene performed for years.

Lucas was charming.

Lucas was loud.

Lucas was forgiven.

Jacob was steady, which meant he could be overlooked without anyone feeling guilty.

He had spent most of his adult life becoming the kind of son families say they are grateful for when they need something fixed.

He worked in accounting, remembered dates, answered calls, sent money when emergencies arrived, and made hard things look simple enough that nobody had to ask what they cost him.

Lucas had spent those same years becoming the kind of man people described as full of potential.

Potential is a generous word when someone else keeps paying the overdue notices.

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