At Her Engagement Party, My Fire Scars Exposed A Six-Year Lie-Tep

My sister’s engagement party was supposed to be the kind of night families frame and talk about for years.

By the end of it, people would remember it for a different reason.

They would remember the way the music stopped.

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They would remember the silk napkin on my arm.

They would remember the retired fire commissioner pointing at me in front of a ballroom full of expensive dresses, polished shoes, and champagne glasses and asking one question that cracked my family open.

My name is Claire Morgan, and for six years my family treated the scars on my left arm like I had brought shame home instead of surviving it.

The night began with white roses, gold light, and the smell of cold lake air slipping in every time someone opened the hotel doors.

Vanessa had chosen a ballroom overlooking Lake Michigan, because of course she had.

My older sister never wanted a room unless it announced something about her before she entered it.

The windows were tall enough to catch the city lights.

The chandeliers made the marble floors shine.

The band was playing softly near the bar, and a waiter moved through the room with a silver tray of champagne flutes like he was afraid of breathing too hard.

I stood just inside the entrance for a second and wondered whether it was too late to leave.

My invitation had arrived three days earlier.

Not three weeks.

Not even one week.

Three days.

My mother’s handwriting was on the envelope, and my name had been added in the corner under the hotel address, small and cramped, as if she had remembered me only because the guest list looked uneven.

I had stared at it on my kitchen counter for a long time.

I had told myself not to go.

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