Dad Humiliated My Kids, So I Opened The Folder He Feared-heuh

My dad said my children needed to learn how to behave after telling them they were not expected, while welcoming my brother’s children as if they were little guests of honour.

So I told him that perhaps their grandfather needed to learn how to be fair.

That was the sentence that changed the temperature of the whole garden.

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The barbecue still hissed.

Children still ran across the damp grass, dragging paper flags through the air and laughing as if nothing serious could happen on a family afternoon.

But every adult near the patio table suddenly looked away.

One cousin stared into her plastic cup.

Mike’s wife busied herself with a napkin that did not need folding.

Mum stood by the back door with the kind of smile people use when they want everyone to pretend something ugly has not just been said out loud.

My son Jake was beside me, his hands empty.

My daughter Eve stood close to Laura, staring at the box of sparklers on the table.

She was six, but she understood enough.

Every other child had been given one.

She and Jake had not.

Dad’s explanation had been simple.

He had only brought enough for the children who were expected.

It was not the first time my parents had made it clear that Mike mattered more than I did.

That kind of thing becomes part of the wallpaper if it happens for long enough.

Mike got praised for ideas I carried out.

Mike got forgiven for mistakes I quietly fixed.

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