My Sister Broke My Wrist At Sunday Dinner — Then The X-Ray Exposed Everything-Teptep

At Sunday dinner, my sister twisted my wrist until the bone cracked and told me to walk it off.

My parents laughed while my fingers turned purple, so three hours later a doctor looked at my X-ray and called the police.

The strange thing about a family habit is how ordinary it can look from the outside.

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A roast on the table.

Mugs by the kettle.

A mother wiping the worktop even though it is already clean.

A father folding his newspaper with a sigh, as if the world is always interrupting him at the worst possible moment.

A sister arriving late, loud, triumphant, filling the narrow hallway before she has even shut the front door.

That was Sarah.

Thirty years old, powerful, competitive, proud of every medal she had ever won and every person she had ever made feel smaller.

I was twenty-eight and still somehow expected to behave like the little sister who should smile, apologise, and move out of the way.

Mum had asked me to come early that Sunday because she wanted the dinner to be nice.

In our family, nice meant polished plates, no raised voices in front of neighbours, and everybody pretending the past had not left marks.

I laid out her good china while the rain tapped against the back window.

The house smelt of roast potatoes, gravy, furniture polish, and damp coats drying too close to the radiator.

It should have felt warm.

Instead, I moved carefully through each room, checking the table, checking the oven, checking the mood.

That was what I did in that house.

I managed the air.

Sarah arrived with her medals still round her neck.

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