At Her Brother’s Dinner, A Judge Recognized The Sister They Hid-eirian

My phone began buzzing across the nightstand at 2:07 a.m.

At first, I thought the sound had worked itself into a dream.

Then the hard little rattle came again, scraping through the quiet of my Philadelphia apartment until I opened my eyes.

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The room was too warm from the radiator.

March had left a cold film on the window, but inside, the heat pressed against my skin and made the air feel close.

Somewhere outside, a siren rose and fell, sharp for a few seconds, then swallowed by the city.

I reached for the phone with one hand still half asleep beneath me.

Mom.

Her name glowed on the screen with the kind of timing that turns your stomach before you even answer.

No one calls at 2 a.m. because they suddenly miss you.

I snatched the phone up so quickly the charging cord slapped against my lamp.

“Mom?”

Her voice came through calm and fully awake.

That was worse than panic.

Panic would have meant an accident, a hospital, a real emergency.

Calm meant she had planned the wound.

“Tomorrow night,” she said, “your brother’s fiancée’s family is coming over for dinner. You should come.”

I sat up and pushed my hair out of my face.

The apartment was dark except for the microwave clock glowing from the kitchen doorway.

2:08.

“Tomorrow?” I asked. “You couldn’t have told me earlier?”

“I’ve been busy.”

I almost laughed.

In my family, busy meant Cade.

It had always meant Cade.

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