She Mocked My Coat At A Party, Then My Phone Call Exposed Her-Tep

By the time Rachel Miller pinched the sleeve of my old coat between two polished fingers, everyone in my brother’s living room had already assigned me a role.

Not the sister.

Not the daughter.

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Not the guest.

The warning.

The woman they could look at and quietly promise themselves they would never become.

Jared’s new house smelled like bourbon, white wine, and an expensive vanilla candle that was trying too hard.

The living room was all white leather, glass, brushed gold, and catered appetizers lined up on slate trays.

Every lamp was on.

Every glass was full.

Every person there looked like they had decided before I arrived that I was going to be the awkward part of the evening.

Rachel smiled at me in the middle of all of it.

She lifted my sleeve like it was evidence.

“Jared,” she called toward the kitchen, “you didn’t tell me your sister was coming straight from a shelter.”

The room reacted before it thought.

A few people by the fireplace laughed into their wine.

Someone behind me made a soft embarrassed sound that was almost worse than laughter.

My brother Jared froze with a beer halfway to his mouth.

My father looked up from his bourbon, saw me, saw the coat, and gave me the tired, disappointed smile he had been giving me since I was twelve years old and still somehow failing a test I had never agreed to take.

“Don’t start, Vanessa,” Dad said. “Rachel’s joking. Try not to be so sensitive tonight.”

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