They Took One Daughter To Italy, Then Came Home To An Empty Room-heuh

My parents said they could only afford to take one daughter on holiday, so they chose my sister and left me behind.

When they came home, my room was empty, every piece I had ever bought was gone, and the silence told them I was never coming back.

They had imagined me staying behind like I always did.

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Watering the plants.

Collecting the post.

Putting the bins out on the right morning.

Replying kindly to photos from Italy as if my place in the family had not just been explained to me over roast chicken.

They thought I would be disappointed for a few days, then sensible.

That was the word they used when they meant quiet.

Sensible.

Victoria was sensible.

Victoria understood money.

Victoria did not make scenes.

Victoria knew how lucky she was to live at home at twenty-nine, even though living at home had somehow turned into paying for the things everyone else touched without seeing her.

The evening they told me, rain had been tapping lightly against the kitchen window, the sort of soft drizzle that turns the pavement grey and makes a house feel smaller.

The chicken smelled of rosemary and garlic.

The potatoes were crisp at the edges because I had turned them twice.

There was a clean tea towel over my shoulder, four mugs near the kettle, and the green beans steaming in the bowl Mum used whenever she wanted dinner to look effortless.

It had not been effortless.

I had done nearly all of it.

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