Her Family Banned Her From Mother’s Day, Then The Payments Stopped-ngyen

The night before Mother’s Day, my sister tagged me in the family group chat and told me not to come.

Not gently.

Not with an excuse.

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She wrote, “Stay home. Don’t come tomorrow. We’re tired of your side of the family.”

For a few seconds I simply watched the words sit there on my phone, bright and ugly against the dark bedroom wall.

The room smelt faintly of lemon sugar because the bars I had baked for Mum were cooling in the kitchen.

On the bed, the suitcase was open.

Mark was folding Emma’s little yellow dress, smoothing the skirt with both hands in that careful way of his, as though neatness could protect our children from people who had never been gentle with them.

Beside him sat the framed photo I had wrapped for Mum, covered in tissue paper.

On top of it was the card Emma had made herself, with Grandma written in uneven letters and purple hearts pressed so hard into the paper that the crayon had left little dents.

We had been ready to go.

We had packed clothes, presents, snacks for the drive, spare jumpers in case the weather turned, and the ordinary hope that perhaps this year everyone would behave.

Then Allison sent one sentence and stripped all the pretence away.

I read it again.

“Stay home. Don’t come tomorrow. We’re sick of your side of the family.”

There are moments when anger arrives loudly.

This one did not.

It came in quietly and sat down beside me.

My thumb hovered over the screen.

I could hear the old pipes shifting in the wall and the low hum of the fridge downstairs.

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