Mother Burned Me With Soup—Then My Lawyer Waited in Her House-eirian

The soup hit my face like fire, and for three seconds, I forgot how to breathe.

It seized my cheek, ran down my jaw, slipped beneath the collar of my blouse, and made the whole kitchen smell like chicken stock, onions, pepper, and betrayal.

My mother stood over me with the empty bowl in her hand.

Image

She did not look horrified.

She looked satisfied.

“Give her all your things — or get out!” she screamed.

Behind her, Violet smiled.

Not a shocked smile.

Not a nervous one.

A victorious one.

“All I said,” I whispered, “was no.”

Violet crossed her arms, and the bracelet my mother had bought her clicked against the marble counter.

“You embarrassed me,” she said.

“You asked for my car, my laptop, and the necklace Dad gave me.”

My mother’s face tightened like I was the one being cruel.

“She needs them more than you do. Violet has an interview tomorrow. You work from home. You don’t need a car.”

“I own that car.”

“You live under my roof.”

That sentence had lived in the walls longer than either of us wanted to admit.

She had used it when I was nineteen and came home from college.

She had used it when Dad got sick and I moved back to help.

She had used it after his funeral, even while I paid the property taxes from the account he had left in my name.

I looked at the crooked wedding photo near the pantry.

My mother and my late father were smiling in it, frozen inside the version of our family she liked to display.

She always called this her house.

Read More