He Called My Family Broken, Then The Old Texts Told The Truth-olive

Garrett gave me two days to choose between him and the people who had raised me.

He did not call it an ultimatum.

He called it protecting himself.

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That was the first thing that made me sit very still.

The second was the sentence he sent right after.

“Agree to my boundaries, or I cancel the wedding.”

I had the venue contract open on the couch beside me when the message came through.

I read his message three times.

Then I set the phone down because my hands had started to shake.

All of it had started with Levi sleeping on our couch.

Levi was my cousin by marriage and my brother by childhood.

When my mother married his father, I was twelve and angry at the whole world.

Levi was thirteen and already good at pretending nothing hurt.

We shared a hallway for six years, stole each other’s snacks, and covered for each other when one of us missed curfew.

Garrett knew that history.

He had heard it over dinner.

He had seen Levi at birthdays.

He had clapped Levi on the shoulder at our engagement party and told him he better give a speech at the wedding.

So when Levi said he might stop by our place on his way back from Seattle, I told Garrett before I left for Portland.

“Sure,” Garrett said. “No problem.”

That was the version of him I trusted.

Saturday afternoon, I was at Claire’s apartment stirring pasta when he called.

I wiped my hands on a towel and called him back two minutes later.

He answered on the first ring.

“Why didn’t you answer?”

“I was cooking,” I said.

His voice was flat.

“FaceTime me right now.”

I switched to video.

Garrett’s face filled the screen.

There was no hello.

There was only the question.

“Where are you?”

“Claire’s,” I said. “I told you I would be here all weekend.”

Then he asked who was at our place.

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