Mum Called Me A Burden, Then The Bills Revealed Everything-ngyen

At holiday lunch, my mother leaned close enough for only me to hear and said, “You need to stop relying on the family.”

The strangest part was that everyone else heard it anyway.

They just kept eating.

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The room looked warm from the outside, all yellow light and polished glasses and steam rising from dishes that had taken hours to prepare.

Inside, it felt like a stage set built for a family that only existed when other people were watching.

My coat was still damp from the drizzle, hanging in the hallway beside Dad’s old jacket and Bobby’s expensive-looking scarf.

The windows had gone misty at the edges.

Somewhere behind me, the kettle clicked off after Mum had made tea and forgotten to pour it.

Dad folded his napkin across his lap with slow, careful movements.

Steven asked if anyone wanted more potatoes.

Bobby made a joke about eating too much and needing to start running in January, though he had never willingly run anywhere in his life.

Mum laughed in that clipped little way of hers, not because she was amused, but because laughter was part of the arrangement.

We all knew the arrangement.

You smiled.

You passed the dish.

You did not mention the things that actually kept the family standing.

I was reaching for the gravy when she leaned towards me.

It was such a small movement that nobody would have noticed it from across the table.

Her shoulder shifted.

Her perfume cut through the smell of roast meat and buttered vegetables.

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