When Her Family Finally Read Page Seven, The Word Sensitive Became Evidence Against Them-myhoa

Mom’s thumb pressed the corner of page seven until the paper bent.

The candle beside the cake had burned low, leaving a black curl in the wax. The roast beef smell had turned heavy in the room. Rain ticked against the bay window. Somewhere in the kitchen, the ice maker dropped a fresh batch with a plastic crack that made Dad flinch.

Mom read the first line silently.

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Then the second.

Mark stopped moving completely. His arms were still folded, but his shoulders had crept toward his ears. A red patch climbed from the collar of his blue button-down to the underside of his jaw.

“Read it out loud,” I said.

My voice did not rise. That seemed to bother them more.

Mom swallowed. Her lipstick had faded at the center of her mouth, and the wrinkle between her eyebrows deepened until it looked carved in.

She read, “June 14, 2019. Group text after Mark took $3,200 from my emergency account and called it borrowing.”

Mark’s chair gave one tiny squeak.

Mom kept going.

“Mark wrote: She’ll get over it. She always does. Just call her sensitive until she shuts up.”

No one reached for the cake.

Dad’s gold watch ticked against the table when his wrist shifted. He looked at Mark first, then at me, then down at the yellow highlighter in his own hand like it had become something dirty.

Mark opened his mouth. Closed it. His throat moved hard.

“That was taken out of context,” he said.

I slid my phone across the table, already unlocked to the screenshot. “Context is right underneath it.”

Mom did not touch the phone at first. Her hand hovered over it, fingers curled, the same way she had hovered over the page. For years she had touched my pain only from a safe distance, like it might burn her.

Dad picked up the phone instead.

The blue light lit the underside of his face. He scrolled once. Twice. His lips pressed together so tightly the skin around them went pale.

He read the next message without being asked.

“Dad wrote: Don’t engage. She’s looking for attention.”

The room changed shape around those words.

Mom reached for the back of a dining chair and gripped it. Her knuckles, usually softened by lotion and rings, sharpened white under the chandelier.

Mark leaned forward. “Okay. Okay, that was years ago.”

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