Mother-In-Law Called Me A Profiteer—Then The Police Radio Spoke-Teptep

The smell of wet charcoal was the first thing I noticed, thick in the July air and clinging to the back of my throat.

It mixed with firelighters, warm plastic cups, grilled sausages, and the sharp sweetness of pastries melting slightly on a table that had been set up too close to the kitchen door.

Children ran across the grass with glowing bracelets on their wrists.

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A speaker near the bay window played an old song too loudly, its sound cracking each time someone’s phone passed too near it.

The little tricolour flag on Monique’s railing kept snapping in the breeze as if it knew a storm was coming before the rest of us did.

I had been carrying a bowl towards the long table when her hand landed on me.

Not gently.

Her nails pressed through my blouse and into my shoulder, hard enough to make my fingers tighten round the bowl.

“Get your filthy hands out of my house, you parasite!” Monique Laurent shouted.

The words tore across the garden.

They were so loud they seemed to push the music back into the speaker.

For a moment, nobody moved.

A man near the drinks table held a plastic cup inches from his mouth.

Julien’s cousin stared down at the plate in her lap as though if she did not look up, she would not be required to remember any of it.

A child stopped near the gate, bracelet glowing green against his wrist.

The whole gathering became a stage, and I was placed in the middle of it without being asked.

Monique shoved me backwards.

My hip hit the table and the tray of mimosa eggs slid from the edge.

It dropped onto the stone slabs with a soft, ugly sound.

Yellow filling burst across the patio.

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