She Wore Her Army Uniform to the Wedding. The Groom Went Pale-eirian

I was eighteen the first time my parents told me to be independent.

They did not say it like a lesson.

They said it like a verdict.

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The kitchen smelled like citrus because my mother, Eleanor, was peeling a clementine with slow, careful fingers while I sat across from her with my college acceptance letter and tuition bill spread out on the table.

My scholarship covered part of it.

Not all.

I had printed the financial aid forms, highlighted the remaining balance, and made a small spreadsheet because I thought numbers might make my need look responsible instead of desperate.

My hands were pressed flat on the paper so they would not shake.

“Can you help me cover what the scholarship doesn’t?” I asked.

My mother did not look at the spreadsheet.

She pulled another strip of orange peel away and set it neatly on a paper towel.

“You’ll figure it out, Sarah,” she said. “That’s what being an adult is.”

I looked at my father.

Richard Bennett sat at the end of the table with his phone in one hand, reading something that apparently mattered more than his daughter trying not to beg.

“Dad?” I said.

He barely glanced up.

“Your mother’s right,” he muttered.

That was how decisions happened in our house.

My mother delivered the blade.

My father made silence look like agreement.

A week later, Chloe complained that the hand-me-down car she had been driving made her look poor in the student parking lot.

By Friday afternoon, a metallic silver BMW convertible was parked in the driveway with a giant red bow on the hood.

Not a small bow.

A showroom bow.

The kind meant for photographs.

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