I Came Home For Christmas And Found Out I Was The Free Babysitter-heuh

My mum begged me to fly home for the holidays.

When I got there, she did not hug me.

She told me I was babysitting my sister’s four kids while they went on a “family” trip.

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I smiled, said one sentence, and suddenly my mother was whispering, “No… no way. Please.”

My name is Olivia Parker, and at twenty-nine I really should have known better than to pack hope into my suitcase.

I had packed it anyway.

It sat under the wrapped presents and beside the sensible shoes, the one fragile thing I kept bringing back to my family no matter how often they broke it.

Two days before Christmas, after a ten-hour travel day, I arrived at my mother’s house cold, tired, and stupidly ready to be loved.

The pavements outside were wet.

My coat collar was damp.

My suitcase wheel had started making that awful clicking sound somewhere between the last train platform and the front step.

I remember standing there for a second before knocking, watching the glow from the hallway spill through the glass panel.

Inside, I could hear children.

Not quiet children.

Excited children.

That should have warned me.

Still, I adjusted the gift bag on my shoulder and told myself not to be bitter before I had even crossed the threshold.

It was Christmas.

People changed at Christmas, didn’t they?

At least, that was what sentimental people said when they had not grown up in my house.

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