My Sister Threw Coffee At Me After I Refused Her Credit Card-heuh

At breakfast, my sister asked for my credit card as if it were already hers.

When I said no, she threw hot coffee into my face.

It ran down my cheek, along my jaw, and under my collar while my parents sat at the kitchen table and watched.

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My mother pressed a towel to my skin and whispered, “She’s just stressed,” as if that explained the heat burning through my shirt.

My father told me not to turn “something small” into a scene.

I left that house with my face stinging, my hands shaking, and no apology from anyone.

One month later, they rang me crying, begging me not to be so harsh on them.

The strange part is that I had gone home wanting peace.

I had been given ten days of leave, and for the first few hours of the journey back I let myself believe the old house might feel like somewhere I could rest.

The train windows were streaked with rain, and I remember watching grey fields blur past while my kit bag pressed against my knee.

I told myself Mum would put the kettle on before she asked anything difficult.

I told myself Dad would ask about work in that awkward, careful voice he used when he was trying to sound casual and failing.

I told myself Tessa might behave like a sister instead of a bill with a heartbeat.

It was embarrassing how much I still wanted that.

The house looked the same when I reached it, with the narrow path, the damp step, and the little row of shoes by the door.

My old coat peg was still there.

My mug was still in the cupboard, pushed behind the chipped ones nobody liked.

My room still smelt faintly of laundry powder and old carpet.

For a moment, I let those details fool me.

Home can do that.

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