After I Canceled My Sister’s $3,500 Transfers, Dad Called Nordstrom And The Whole Family Learned The Truth-eirian

The brass handle at Bellini’s was cold under my palm, polished smooth by years of people leaving expensive dinners with cleaner lives than mine.

Behind me, Dad still held my phone.

Brielle still sat with her wine glass suspended, her fingers white around the stem. The soft restaurant music kept playing, forks kept touching plates, and somewhere near the kitchen, a waiter laughed too loudly at nothing.

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Then Dad’s voice came again, lower this time.

“Brielle. Is it true?”

I did not turn all the way around. I only looked over my shoulder.

My sister’s mouth opened, but no answer came out. Her lipstick had left a red crescent on the rim of her glass. Her napkin lay twisted in her lap, pinched between both hands like it could save her.

Dad looked down at my phone again.

Thirty transfers.

$105,000.

Every neat little line arranged in black and white, more honest than anything said at that table in two and a half years.

Brielle finally lowered her glass.

“Kelsey shouldn’t have done this here,” she whispered.

Dad’s eyes lifted.

“That is not what I asked.”

The words landed harder than a shout.

I left before she answered.

Outside, Seattle rain had started again, thin and silver beneath the restaurant awning. My Subaru sat between a black Mercedes and a white Range Rover, rain ticking softly on its roof. I sat inside for almost six minutes before starting the engine.

My hands smelled like wine, cardboard dust, and the lavender soap from Bellini’s restroom. The steering wheel felt damp beneath my fingers.

At 9:17 p.m., I unlocked my apartment door and stepped into the quiet.

No applause. No apology. No family audience.

Just my kitchen counter stacked with packing slips, two rolls of tape, and a box of bamboo-core hiking poles waiting to be labeled before morning.

I kicked off my boots and opened my laptop.

The spreadsheet was already there.

Porter Family Support.

I had named it like a business expense because that made it easier to look at. Cleaner. Less humiliating. Less like a grown woman paying for her sister’s fantasy while her own father called her work a couch hobby.

The first transfer was dated January 20, 2023.

$3,500.

Memo: Rent help.

The email that started it all sat in a folder beside the spreadsheet. Brielle’s subject line looked small and helpless.

I hate asking this.

I opened it.

“Kelsey, I’m drowning. Credit card debt hit $18,000 and I’m two months behind on rent. I’ll lose my apartment. Just need help for a few months until I get my finances straight. Please don’t tell Dad.”

A few months.

My jaw tightened until my molars touched.

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