The Plane Ticket, The Hidden Son, And The Uncle Who Asked One Call-eirian

The first thing I noticed was not the plane ticket.

It was my niece’s face.

Emily sat at her mother’s dining table with her shoulders lifted and her eyes shining, trying not to smile too hard while she waited for the rest of us to react.

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She had been that way since she was little.

If she loved a song, she played it for everyone.

If she found a good bakery, she brought boxes to Sunday dinner.

If she believed someone was kind, she defended them before they had earned it.

That was what I loved about her, and it was also what scared me.

My sister Laura passed the potatoes and said, “Tell them what Evan is doing.”

Emily tucked her hair behind her ear.

“He wants to fly me out to Portland next month.”

The room warmed around her.

My wife smiled.

My brother-in-law asked whether Portland had good coffee.

Laura looked like she had already picked a wedding color.

I asked one question.

“Have you met him in person?”

The warmth thinned.

Emily shook her head.

“Not yet, but we talk every day.”

“Video calls?”

“All the time.”

“From his home?”

She paused just long enough for the answer to arrive before she said it.

“Mostly from his car. He says his roommates are loud.”

I set my fork down.

Laura saw the movement and narrowed her eyes at me.

“Mark.”

She said my name like a warning.

I asked where Emily would stay.

“A hotel,” Emily said. “He has roommates, so it would be weird at his place.”

“And he is flying here first?”

“He can’t. Work commitments.”

“But he can arrange a whole weekend for you there.”

Emily looked down at her plate.

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