Her Sister Raised The Wrench At Dinner. Then The Lights Hit The Window-heuh

The metallic taste of blood is a flavor your body remembers before your mind understands the story.

Copper sat on my tongue.

Candle wax hung in the dining room air.

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The hardwood floor was cold under the back of my head, and above me the chandelier split into bright white pieces like my eyes had forgotten how to hold one shape at a time.

My name is Emily, and that night began with my mother setting out the good china.

That was how I should have known.

In our family, Eleanor only made things beautiful when she wanted somebody to feel grateful for being cut.

The dining room looked like a magazine version of a home that had never existed for me.

Mahogany table polished until it reflected the candle flames.

Silverware with tiny floral handles.

Linen napkins folded into stiff white triangles beside plates I had never been trusted to wash, much less use.

My father had spent the hour before dinner “fixing” a cabinet hinge near the sideboard, except the hinge still stuck, and the heavy iron wrench he had used was left on top of the runner like an ugly little accident waiting for permission.

Madison arrived ten minutes late and made it feel like an entrance.

She had one hand tucked through Travis’s arm and the other holding a bottle of wine she announced was “actually decent,” which was Madison’s way of saying nobody else at the table could afford it.

Travis was tall, pressed, polished, and quiet in the way expensive men are trained to be quiet.

Madison told us he was a senior investment banker at Goldman Sachs before he had even taken off his coat.

She said it the same way she used to say honor roll, prom queen, and “Mom said I could have your sweater.”

Like winning only counted if I was nearby to lose.

I sat at the far end of the table.

That had always been my place.

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