He Spent Their Daughter’s Braces Money on His Sister’s Fur Coat-thuyhien

“Put that chicken cutlet down right now,” Sarah said.

Michael had barely sat at the kitchen table.

The fork was halfway to his mouth, the fried cutlet balanced on the prongs, the mashed potatoes still steaming under the tired yellow light above their little duplex kitchen.

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The room smelled like hot oil, dish soap, and laundry that had gone sour in the washer because Sarah had forgotten to move it before leaving for her second shift.

Michael froze.

The cutlet slid off the fork and dropped into the potatoes with a soft, greasy slap.

Oil splattered across the plastic tablecloth.

Sarah did not blink.

“Where is the money we saved for Emma’s braces?” she asked.

Michael slowly raised his eyes.

He was still wearing his work pants from the plumbing supply warehouse, the knees gray with dust, his undershirt stretched across his stomach.

He looked tired.

But Sarah knew the difference between tired and caught.

For twelve years, she had learned the little tells.

The way he rubbed the side of his nose when he was about to lie.

The way his mouth tightened before he blamed someone else.

The way his eyes moved toward a door, a window, a phone, any escape that did not require him to answer like a man.

“I told you,” he muttered. “It’s moving.”

“Moving where?”

He sighed like she was ruining a peaceful home.

“Sarah, I worked all day. Can I eat like a normal person before you start interrogating me?”

“No.”

That one word made him look up again.

Sarah was standing in the kitchen doorway in her old blue robe, the one with a frayed belt loop and a small bleach mark near the pocket.

She had meant to replace it last winter.

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