Her Sister’s Boyfriend Watched Her All Dinner. Then the Phone Buzzed-congtien

Blood has a taste you never forget.

It is sharp, metallic, and terrifyingly real when it fills your mouth in a room where nobody is trying to help you.

That Saturday night started with lemon polish and candle smoke.

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My mother, Eleanor, had wiped down the dining room table twice, even though nobody had eaten there in months.

She brought out the expensive china she never let me touch.

She polished the silverware until the handles caught the chandelier light.

She set the candles in a straight line down the center of the table, like we were hosting a senator instead of my sister’s new boyfriend.

Through the dining room window, I could see the small American flag on the front porch moving gently in the cold air.

It made the house look normal from the street.

That was always the trick with my family.

From the outside, everything looked cared for.

Trimmed shrubs.

A swept walkway.

Clean windows.

A mailbox with our last name in black letters.

Inside, there were places for people.

Madison’s place was the center.

Mine was the end.

Closest to the drafty window.

Far enough away that I could be ignored, but close enough to be corrected.

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