Aunt Diane Called Nora A Guest. Then Lily Saw The Family Papers-eirian

“Is this a hotel?” she asked.

My husband Daniel smiled without looking away from the road.

“No, honey. This is Aunt Diane’s house.”

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Lily leaned closer to the backseat window until her breath fogged a small oval on the glass.

“She lives here?”

“Most days,” I said, because after ten years of Whitmore gatherings, I had learned that safe answers were often better than accurate ones.

The tires whispered over the gravel drive, soft and expensive, a sound so smooth it made our ordinary sedan feel louder than it was.

Afternoon light flashed off the pale stone house ahead, and for a moment I had to turn my face from the glare.

Daniel reached across the console and touched my knee.

It was quick.

Warm.

Almost nothing.

But I knew what it meant.

We are fine.

You are fine.

This is just a party.

I wanted to believe him.

I wanted to believe that a birthday lunch, an outdoor family gathering, and a set of photographs could not become something sharp enough to cut a child.

But I had been bracing myself since Tuesday at 7:18 p.m.

That was when Marcus called Daniel and me to confirm we were coming.

Not Diane.

Diane never called me unless there was a reason to make me feel as if I had forgotten some rule everyone else had been born knowing.

“Diane really wants everyone there,” Marcus had said.

I nearly laughed.

Diane wanted everyone there the way a gallery wanted paintings on the wall.

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