This Lunar New Year, I told my mum I would not be coming home again.
I said it gently, as if a soft voice could make the words less cruel.
“Mum, happy New Year. Work has suddenly added extra events, so I can’t make it back. I’ve just transferred you and Dad £6,000. Buy something nice. Please don’t keep saving every penny.”

I had the phone tucked between my shoulder and ear while both hands moved across the keyboard.
My throat felt scraped raw after three nights of overtime.
The poster on my laptop was almost finished, but almost finished meant nothing in my job.
One more colour adjustment.
One more animation file.
One more urgent message from someone who said the client was waiting.
The work chat kept flashing in the corner of the screen.
“Tri Dao, can the main tone be warmer?”
“Tri Dao, send the animation file when you can.”
“Tri Dao, urgent. Are you there?”
I stared at the messages and let them wait.
For once, I wanted to finish a call with my mother before work swallowed me again.
At the other end, Mum’s voice came through with static and household noise wrapped around it.
The television was too loud.
Bowls clinked.
Someone laughed.
Little Duan Duan, my sister’s daughter, was shrieking the way only a three-year-old can shriek when the whole house revolves around her.
It was noisy enough to make my chest ache.
My rented flat was silent except for the laptop fan and the dull hum of the old heater.
Outside the window, the pavement shone with rain, and the glass reflected my own pale face back at me.
“Not coming again?” Mum asked.
She did not accuse me.
That made it worse.
“That’s the third year, Tri Dao.”
My fingers stopped over the keyboard.
“I know. I’m sorry. The project has to go live right after the holiday. They’re paying triple for overtime and there’ll be a project bonus. I thought I’d earn a bit more while I can.”
It sounded responsible.
It sounded sensible.
It was even partly true.
The tickets were almost impossible to get.
The journey would take two days there and back.
I would arrive exhausted, smile through three meals, listen to everyone ask why I looked so thin, then leave before the house had even warmed around me.
But those were only the reasons I said out loud.
The reason I kept folded inside myself was simpler and uglier.
I was afraid to go home.
Afraid of being the daughter who earned money but was never present.
Afraid of my sister’s husband making jokes that sounded light until they lodged under the skin.
Afraid of watching Mum admire the bags and boxes my sister brought through the door.
Afraid of Dad saying nothing while checking whether I had eaten enough.
Money was easier than presence.
A bank transfer did not need to sit at the table and explain itself.
“I sent it already,” I said. “Check later. Buy proper food for you and Dad. Don’t always think about saving.”
Mum sighed.
I could picture her standing in the kitchen, one hand on the counter, the kettle probably clicking off behind her even though everyone else wanted cold drinks and fruit.
“You’re alone out there. Everything costs money. Keep some for yourself.”
“I have enough. Honestly.”
It was another neat lie.
Enough meant rent was paid.
Enough meant I could afford instant coffee, cheap dinners, and a new charger if the old one finally gave up.
Enough did not mean comfort.
Enough did not mean rest.
Mum began giving instructions, because that was how she loved me from a distance.
Eat properly.
Do not keep ordering takeaway.
Do not sleep with the heating too low.
Wear something warm.
Then something crashed at her end.
Duan Duan burst into tears.
My brother-in-law, Chu Hao, shouted, “Oh, my little ancestor! I told you not to run about. Mum, look at her — sunflower seeds all over the floor again.”
Mum hurried away from the phone.
“Tri Dao, I’ll talk later. Duan Duan’s fussing.”
“Go on, Mum. I’m fine.”
I thought the call had ended.
It had not.
The phone stayed alive beside my laptop, still carrying the noise of home into my flat.
I should have cut it off.
Instead, I tapped the speaker button and set it near the keyboard.
At 7:42 p.m. on Lunar New Year’s Eve, my celebration was a cold chicken rice box, a mug of tea I had forgotten to drink, and a desk covered with notes.
The house on the phone sounded warm enough to climb into.
The city outside my window was all wet glass and distant fireworks.
The kind you hear but cannot see.
I opened the banking app and looked again at the transfer.
£6,000 sent successfully.
Message: Happy New Year to you and Dad.
The amount looked almost grand on the screen.
In my life, it had taken months of saying no.
No to a warmer coat.
No to a weekend away.
No to proper meals when a supermarket sandwich would do.
No to sleep, sometimes.
Family came first, I told myself.
That was what decent daughters did.
The work chat flashed again.
I forced myself back into colour palettes and file exports.
For a while, the noise from home blurred into something comforting.
The television hosts shouted New Year greetings.
Duan Duan demanded strawberry yoghurt instead of plain.
My sister, Tri Qing, told Chu Hao to wash more fruit.
Dad seemed to be in the kitchen, because Mum kept telling him to come and watch the programme instead of fussing over dishes.
It was ordinary.
That was why it hurt.
After a while, Mum came back to the phone.
Her voice was closer now.
“Tri Dao? I got the money. Why send so much? Don’t you need it?”
“I’ve kept enough. You and Dad use it.”
“Your sister brought plenty back this year. The fridge is packed.”
I did not know how to answer.
If I praised my sister, it would sound stiff.
If I said I would bring things next time, it would sound like another promise I might not keep.
So I said nothing.
Mum changed the subject quickly.
She asked when I would finish work.
She asked whether I had eaten dumplings.
She asked whether Dad’s back patches had arrived.
I asked whether his back still hurt in the cold.
Mum lowered her voice and said it was better, but he still stiffened up when the weather turned.
Then she added, almost casually, that Tri Qing had put the heating on as soon as she arrived because Duan Duan must not get cold.
I looked at the thin sleeves of my jumper.
The heater beside me clicked and coughed.
“I’m warm here,” I said.
My tea had gone cold.
Mum asked again if I had eaten dumplings.
I looked at the takeaway box beside the laptop, its sauce congealed at the corners.
“Yes,” I lied. “I ordered some. They’re nice.”
“Not as nice as home-made,” Mum muttered. “Your dad mixed pork and cabbage filling himself. Duan Duan ate several.”
I smiled because I could hear the pride in her voice.
The smile did not last.
A daughter can be loved and still feel replaced by the life that happens in her absence.
That was a thought I did not want to have, but it sat down beside me anyway.
Mum talked about my sister’s drive home, the traffic, the child crying in the car, the little studio Tri Qing and Chu Hao ran, and how they were thinking of changing cars.
I listened without really listening.
Whenever the subject turned to my sister, something in me tightened.
Not because I hated her.
I did not.
But comparison had a way of entering a family room without knocking.
Mum said I was more stable.
Big company.
Monthly salary.
Proper office work.
Then, in the next breath, she said I was too far away and Dad missed me more than he admitted.
My nose stung.
I blinked hard.
“I’m really all right, Mum. Don’t worry about me.”
Mothers never accept that instruction.
She was about to answer when Duan Duan called for yoghurt again.
“I have to go,” Mum said. “Sleep early after work.”
“You too. Happy New Year, Mum.”
“Happy New Year, my girl.”
The line gave a long beep.
I thought that was the end.
Then the television noise came back.
The call had not disconnected.
Maybe Mum had pressed the wrong button.
Maybe she had put the phone down without looking.
Either way, I could still hear them.
I reached for the screen.
My finger hovered above the red button.
I knew listening was wrong.
It was shabby and small and not something I could defend.
But the room around me was so quiet, and the room through the phone was so alive.
I wanted one more minute.
Just one.
Duan Duan shouted, “Grandma, I want strawberry! Not plain!”
Mum laughed and said, “All right, all right. Let me put the straw in.”
My sister said, “Mum, don’t spoil her too much. Too much yoghurt isn’t good.”
Chu Hao’s voice slid in after that, lazy and amused.
“So your sister called? Still not coming back?”
My finger froze.
Mum sounded tired when she answered.
“She’s busy with work.”
Chu Hao clicked his tongue.
“Busy. Every year she’s busy. New Year and she’s busier than a minister.”
“Say less,” Mum said.
There was no strength in it.
“Am I wrong?” he asked. “She sends money and thinks that’s enough. What’s the use of £6,000 if the person never comes home? Do you and Dad lack money, or do you miss your daughter?”
The words did not hit like a slap.
They were worse than that.
They slid in carefully, finding places already bruised.
My hands curled on the edge of the desk.
Mum tried to defend me.
“Your sister doesn’t have it easy either.”
Chu Hao laughed.
“What’s hard about sitting in an office? She earns in a month what we fight for in several. Tri Qing and I open that little studio every day, smile at customers, beg for orders, handle everything ourselves. That is hard. She’s comfortable out there. Then New Year comes and she sends money like a receipt for filial duty.”
My sister cut in.
“Chu Hao, enough. It’s New Year. She sent money because she cares.”
“If she cared, she’d come back,” he said. “Dad checked the time all afternoon. He kept saying Tri Dao would call soon. And what did he get? A sentence and a transfer.”
I stared at the black phone screen.
My reflection looked like someone I might pass in a train window and pity for half a second.
I wanted to hang up.
I wanted to shout.
I wanted to explain every night I had worked until my wrists ached, every meal I had skipped, every time I had chosen them over myself.
But no sound came out.
Then my sister spoke again.
Her voice was lower this time.
“Don’t say it like that. She doesn’t know about the money from last year.”
The whole room on the other end went still.
Even through the phone, I felt it.
That sudden family silence when everyone realises one sentence has gone too far.
Mum whispered, “Tri Qing. Why bring that up now?”
My sister sounded frightened.
“I didn’t mean to. I only meant if she ever finds out, she’ll misunderstand.”
Finds out what?
My pulse began to thud in my ears.
The laptop screen blurred.
Chu Hao gave another small laugh, but this one had no humour in it.
“Misunderstand? She’s been paying without knowing where it went. That’s not misunderstanding. That’s stupidity.”
Something inside me turned cold.
Mum snapped his name.
For the first time that night, Dad’s voice came through clearly.
It was rough, older than I remembered, and shaking with anger or shame.
“Bring me the red envelope book.”
No one answered.
Dad repeated, “Now.”
A drawer opened.
Paper rustled.
Duan Duan asked why Grandma was not speaking.
No one answered her either.
My sister began to cry.
“Dad, please don’t. If Tri Dao hears about this, she’ll never forgive us.”
I picked up the phone.
My fingers were trembling so badly I nearly dropped it.
For three years, I had believed distance was my failure.
For three years, I had tried to make love measurable, transferable, useful.
For three years, I had sent money home and told myself it was the least I could do.
Now everyone in that house seemed to know something about my money except me.
I pressed the phone closer to my mouth.
My voice came out quiet.
Too quiet.
“What money?”
On the other end, someone gasped.
The television kept singing in the background, bright and cheerful, as if nothing in the world had just cracked open.
Then Dad said my name.
“Tri Dao.”
And I knew, before anyone explained, that the secret was not small.