Two Cups Of Water At Christmas Opened The Box Cynthia Feared-ngyen

At Christmas dinner, my sister gave my children two cups of water while her kids ate lobster mac and cheese—then my grandmother stood up and brought back the wooden box nobody was supposed to see.

Cynthia had always known how to make things look right from the outside.

She could fold a napkin so sharply it seemed ironed into obedience.

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She could set a table with crystal glasses, white china and candles low enough to flatter every face in the room.

She could make a family dinner look, from the hallway, like the sort of thing people longed for.

Warm.

Traditional.

Safe.

The trouble was that Cynthia had also learnt something else.

She had learnt that if something looked generous enough, people often stopped checking whether it was kind.

My name is Judith.

I am forty-two, a commercial property agent, a wife, a mother of two, and for most of my adult life, I had occupied the thin space at the side of my own family.

Not banished.

Not openly unwanted.

Just overlooked with such consistency that everyone had stopped noticing it.

There are photographs on my mother Laura’s living-room wall that explain it better than any argument could.

Cynthia is in nearly all of them.

Her husband Todd is in most.

Their children, Preston and Sloan, appear in bright frames, well dressed, laughing, held, admired.

I am there twice.

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