My Sister Ruined My Son’s Birthday Gifts And Dad Finally Broke-ngyen

The first present Jessica broke was the dinosaur.

It was not rare, expensive, or impressive enough for an adult to notice twice.

It was a green plastic T. rex from a supermarket toy aisle, with a red button under its belly and a roar that sounded as if it had been recorded inside a tin.

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Jacob loved it immediately.

He had held it in both hands three weeks before his seventh birthday, pressed the button once, smiled to himself, and then put it back without asking for it.

That was the bit that broke my heart.

He was seven, but he already knew the look on my face when I was doing sums in my head beside the bread, the milk, and the cheapest pasta I could find.

He had learnt not to want loudly.

So after work, when the sky had turned that flat grey colour that makes every shop window look tired, I went back and bought the dinosaur.

I bought the wrapping paper too, blue with silver stars, the kind that looked lovely on the roll and impossible once I tried to fold it.

That night, I sat at my small kitchen table with the kettle cooling behind me, a mug of tea going untouched, and a receipt tucked under my phone so Jacob would not find it.

I wrapped the dinosaur badly.

I wrapped the watercolour set, the space book, and the little beginner telescope I had found reduced at the end of an aisle.

Then I wrapped the wooden puzzle my dad had made for him.

Dad had cut it in his shed, slowly and patiently, sanding every edge until Jacob could run his fingers over the pieces without catching a splinter.

It was shaped like the lake near my parents’ holiday cabin, with trees around one side and a tiny cabin carved into the corner.

Jacob had watched him make it over several visits and believed it was magic because Grandad had turned ordinary wood into a place they both loved.

By the time I finished wrapping, it was close to midnight.

The flat was quiet except for the fridge, the distant noise of cars on wet road, and Jacob breathing softly through the wall.

I remember looking at those presents and hoping, foolishly, that my family might manage one afternoon without making me feel ashamed for trying.

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