My Sister Demanded My Credit Card At Breakfast—Then Threw Coffee-heuh

At breakfast, my sister asked for my credit card as if it were already hers.

When I said no, she grabbed her mug and threw hot coffee straight into my face.

I had come home for ten days’ leave with one foolish, private hope.

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Peace.

Not celebration.

Not banners, speeches, or everyone acting like a television advert for family loyalty.

Just a quiet room, a late morning, a cup of coffee, and the strange comfort of being somewhere I did not have to explain myself.

The house looked the same when I arrived.

Same narrow hallway.

Same radiator that clicked when it warmed up.

Same pile of shoes near the door, arranged with no real system except that everyone pretended there was one.

A damp coat hung from the hook by the stairs, dripping slightly onto the mat because the weather had turned overnight, that fine British drizzle that makes everything feel colder than it looks.

The kettle had just boiled in the kitchen.

There was toast on the side, eggs in a pan, and a tea towel folded over the handle of the oven door.

It should have felt ordinary.

It should have felt safe.

Instead, before I even took my coat off properly, I felt the old pressure settle across my shoulders.

The pressure of being useful.

The pressure of being sensible.

The pressure of being the one who could not afford to fall apart because everyone else already had.

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