His Brother Took The Thanksgiving Money, Then Uninvited His Kids-heuh

I was standing at my kitchen counter with a roll of silver ribbon between my teeth when my phone buzzed.

The apartment smelled like cinnamon, tape glue, and the cheap vanilla candle Grace had begged me to light because Thanksgiving needed “a fancy smell.”

The second bottle of sparkling apple cider was half-wrapped in brown paper.

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Grace had decided plain bottles looked lonely.

Alex was on the floor cutting out construction-paper turkeys with the kind of seriousness most adults reserve for tax season.

He had already made three.

One had purple feathers.

One had sunglasses.

One, according to him, looked “presidential.”

Grace was at the table writing words on paper leaves, her tongue tucked into the corner of her mouth.

She was seven and believed a carefully written word could make a thing true.

Grateful.

Family.

Pie.

I glanced at my phone expecting a grocery coupon or one more family group chat message that somehow skipped right over anything I said.

It was Chris.

My older brother almost never texted me directly unless something needed moving, fixing, paying for, or explaining slowly over the phone while he pretended he already knew it.

So when his name lit up my screen, my stomach tightened before I even opened the message.

Don’t bother coming to Thanksgiving. We don’t have room for you or your kids.

I read it once.

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