She Took Back Dad’s £10,000 Rolex, Then Stopped Paying The Bills-heuh

At my dad’s retirement barbecue, I gave him a £10,000 Rolex.

For three seconds, everyone clapped.

Then he looked at the watch, looked at me, and smirked.

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“You’re still my disappointment.”

The garden carried on for a moment, because ordinary life is stubborn like that.

The music near the patio kept playing.

The burgers hissed on the grill.

A neighbour near the fence laughed once, too loudly, because he had not yet worked out whether my father had made a joke or thrown a knife.

I knew which one it was.

I had known that tone since childhood.

My name was Allison Reed, and I was thirty-five years old, though in my parents’ back garden I could still be made to feel twelve.

My dad, Frank Reed, had retired after thirty-eight years as a senior police officer, and the barbecue was meant to be a celebration of discipline, service, sacrifice and all the other words people used when they meant him.

Nobody used those words for me.

I was just the eldest daughter.

The difficult one.

The one who lived away.

The one who worked too much, married nobody, had no children, and stopped saying yes as quickly as I used to.

My brother Jason was standing by the cooler with a beer in his hand, grinning like the garden had turned into a show arranged for him.

Jason had a talent for being forgiven.

He could lose a job and be tired.

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