She Stopped A Livestream Prank And Her Family Made Her The Villain-Tep

Sarah had always believed she could earn peace from her family if she worked hard enough to make herself useful.

That was why, two days before her father’s 60th birthday, she was standing in her parents’ backyard with a roll of tape between her teeth, tying white string lights to the pergola while her eight-year-old daughter, Lily, handed her clothespins from a plastic bowl.

The May air smelled like cut grass and charcoal smoke from the neighbor’s grill.

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Every few minutes, a car rolled past the mailbox out front, tires hissing over the warm street, and Sarah told herself the house looked almost happy.

There were rented tables on the patio, blue paper plates stacked by the sliding door, a strawberry cake waiting in the refrigerator, and a catering receipt folded in Sarah’s purse because she had paid the deposit herself.

Her father, Robert, had not asked her to do that.

He had simply said, “It would be nice if the family did something decent for once.”

In Sarah’s family, that usually meant Sarah did it.

She bought the food.

She confirmed the delivery window.

She wiped down the patio chairs, trimmed the stray threads from the tablecloths, and drove back to the store for more cups after her mother announced that the first package looked cheap.

Linda, her mother, stood on the back steps with a paper coffee cup in one hand and a frown on her face.

“That ribbon is crooked, Sarah,” she said.

Sarah looked up from the knot she was tying.

“It’s temporary. I’ll straighten it.”

“It looks like a gas station birthday party.”

Lily’s face changed first.

She had always been sensitive to Linda’s voice, the way children are sensitive to weather before adults admit a storm is coming.

Sarah forced a small smile for her daughter.

“It’s fine, sweetheart. Hand me another pin.”

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