Birthday Party Cancelled After Sister Tried To Move Into My Home-ngyen

“The party is cancelled. The lawyer is coming,” my father said on my birthday. It was all because I refused to let my sister live in my £1.5 million holiday home. I just nodded, holding back my laughter. Behind the lawyer came the police I had called.

The first time my father said it, I thought I had misheard him.

The room had been full of warm light, birthday cards, half-finished drinks, and that awkward family cheerfulness people put on when they are waiting for cake.

Image

Rain was tapping lightly against the back windows, the sort of steady British drizzle that makes every coat smell faintly damp and every hallway feel crowded.

The kettle had just clicked off in the kitchen because my mother could not attend any gathering, even one with champagne, without asking whether anyone wanted tea.

A few cousins were laughing near the patio doors.

My aunt had a paper napkin tucked beneath her plate.

There were candles on the sideboard and a ridiculous silver banner drooping at one corner because the tape had given up.

Then my father raised his voice and said the party was cancelled.

Nobody laughed.

Nobody asked whether he was joking.

They all knew that tone.

It was the tone he used when he expected the room to become smaller around him.

“Everyone can go,” he said, louder this time. “This party is over.”

I stood by the kitchen island with my hand around a glass I had barely touched.

My younger sister Kristen was beside him, arms folded, her expression arranged into wounded patience.

She had always been good at looking as if she had been treated unfairly before anyone had even answered her.

My mother stood slightly behind them, smoothing the front of her dress and pretending she was embarrassed by the scene.

But she was not surprised.

That was what struck me first.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *