She Refused Her Brother’s Wedding Money, Then The Deed Arrived-Teptep

My brother Ryan had one fist twisted in the back of my jumper and the other clamped round my wrist when my cheek hit the coffee table.

It did not skim me or frighten me by accident.

It hit.

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The sound seemed too clean for something so ugly, a hard crack against polished wood, followed by the smaller noise of my breath leaving me.

For a second, the sitting room went still.

Then Brianna looked up from her phone.

Not properly at me, of course.

Her eyes went to the velvet sofa first, where a few red dots had landed near the cushion seam.

“God, Ryan,” she said, irritated rather than horrified. “My engagement photos are in twenty minutes. Could you not make the place look like a crime scene?”

That was my family in one sentence.

Not Claire is hurt.

Not Ryan, stop.

The sofa.

The photos.

The appearance of things.

I laughed once, and it came out wrong, wet and painful, as if my own body was ashamed to make the sound.

Ryan hauled me up by the back of my collar.

He was forty-two, broad-shouldered, heavy-handed, and still carried the baffled rage of a little boy who had never been told no and believed the whole world had failed him personally.

“Say it again,” he said.

His face was too close.

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