Her Brother Forged Her Name, Then Her Family Came Begging-hihehu

My father did not ask me to help Caleb.

He told me I was going to.

“Your brother owes three hundred and thirty thousand dollars,” Dad said from the head of the dining room table. “You’re paying it.”

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He said it like he was assigning a side dish for Sunday dinner.

The light above the table buzzed softly, the kind of old-house sound you stop noticing until a room goes too quiet.

The roast on the sideboard had gone gray at the edges.

The folder he pushed toward me smelled like printer toner, dust, and panic that belonged to someone else.

My mother, Elaine, sat with both hands in her lap, twisting a napkin until the corner began to shred.

Caleb stood behind Dad with his arms crossed.

He looked pale.

He looked sweaty.

Worst of all, he looked almost bored.

My brother had always been calm after disaster, mostly because disaster had never been required to land on him first.

For as long as I could remember, it landed on me.

When Caleb crashed Dad’s old truck at nineteen, I was the one who helped cover the repair bill because Dad said Caleb was “going through a phase.”

When Caleb quit a job after six weeks because his boss “disrespected him,” I was the one who slipped Mom grocery money because she cried in the laundry room and said she could not ask Dad again.

When Mom had surgery, I rearranged work meetings, brought soup, picked up prescriptions, and slept in the stiff chair beside her bed while Caleb sent a text that said he was praying.

That was my place in the family.

Useful.

Quiet.

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