Grandmother Exposes The Stolen House At Thanksgiving Dinner-heuh

The turkey was still sitting in the middle of the table when my grandmother asked the question that tore my family apart.

It smelled of rosemary, butter, garlic, and the kind of effort my mother only made when she wanted people to behave as if nothing was wrong.

The candles were lit.

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The good plates were out.

The cloth napkins were folded into stiff little shapes beside the wine glasses.

Everyone had been doing their part.

My father carved slowly.

My mother smiled too brightly.

My younger sister Ashley leaned against Kevin’s shoulder as if her life had never contained a single unpaid bill.

And I sat there in black work trousers, trying not to think about the fact that the only money I had in the world was £12.50.

I had checked my bank balance that morning at 9:18.

I remembered the time because I had been standing in my friend’s bathroom, toothbrush in hand, while her children shouted over cartoons in the hallway.

The screen had lit up with the number, small and merciless.

£12.50.

It was not enough for rent.

It was not enough for groceries.

It was barely enough petrol to get between my two shifts and whatever sofa I had been offered for the night.

I had been evicted the month before.

Not dramatically.

Not with shouting in the street or boxes thrown onto the pavement.

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