He Mocked My Daughter At My Mother’s Retirement Party — By Tuesday, Every Account I Held Went Dark-QuynhTranJP

The handle dropped halfway, caught, then jerked again hard enough to make the deadbolt jump in its socket. Metal scraped metal. Emma stood behind me in the hallway, one hand flat against the wall, her socks silent on the wood floor. Morning light came through the blinds in narrow bars, striping the ruined lavender paper on the kitchen counter. The apartment smelled like cold coffee, chlorine, and wet cardboard.

When I opened the door, my father filled the frame first. Richard still had the same broad shoulders that made him seem larger than a room deserved. His cheeks were blotched red. Vanessa stood one step behind him in oversized sunglasses, yesterday’s red dress replaced with cream athleisure that probably cost more than my monthly electric bill. Her mouth was bare, but the smirk from the night before was still sitting on it.

Dad pushed past me before I stepped back.

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‘What the hell did you do?’

He walked straight into my kitchen like the lease had his name on it. Vanessa followed, perfume trailing after her in a bitter cloud. Emma did not move from the hallway. She just watched them with both arms folded tight over her ribs.

On the bookshelf near the dining table sat a ceramic apple my mother had given me the year I got licensed. Number one son, the gold script on the bottom said. She had wrapped it in tissue paper and laughed when I held it up because it was too shiny, too heavy, too sentimental for the apartment I had then. Back when I was twenty-six, she still came to my office opening with lemon bars in a tin and told anyone who would listen that her son designed buildings. Back when Emma was four, my mother used to kneel on this same floor in a wool skirt and let my daughter braid the ends of her hair while cartoons played too loudly in the next room. Once, during a fever, she sat by Emma’s bed with a washcloth and cinnamon tea until sunrise. Those moments stayed in my head like framed photographs long after the people inside them had walked away.

Maybe that was why I kept paying. Not because they were kind. Because once, a long time ago, they had known how to pretend.

Vanessa yanked off her sunglasses and slapped them onto the table beside the wet gift.

‘You cancelled the Airbnb,’ she said. ‘You cancelled the venue. My laptop is locked. Do you have any idea what you’ve done?’

The card she had given me the night before was still tucked beside the sink. I laid it on the table and turned it so they could see the two words in her handwriting. Try harder. The ink looked even meaner in daylight.

‘Some arrangements changed,’ I said.

Dad jabbed a finger toward my chest.

‘You owe this family.’

The sentence landed with a strange, empty sound. Maybe because I had heard versions of it since I was sixteen and working weekends while Vanessa signed up for dance competitions and summer trips. Maybe because Emma was standing ten feet away hearing it now with the same silence I used to wear.

I picked up the shadow box. Water dripped from one corner onto my knuckles. One shell was split clean down the middle. Another had come loose and was stuck to the glass by a stripe of dissolved glue.

‘She made this for Mom,’ I said. ‘You watched your daughter throw it in a pool.’

Vanessa crossed her arms.

‘It was a kid craft. Mom deserved something real.’

Emma made a small sound behind me. Not crying this time. Something flatter. Smaller. The sound of a door inside somebody closing.

Dad looked over my shoulder at her and shrugged.

‘That’s not the issue.’

‘It is the only issue.’

He stepped closer. Ice-blue eyes, shaving nicks on his jaw, stale whiskey still in his pores from the party. ‘Family doesn’t abandon family.’

I set the shadow box down carefully, so carefully it made Vanessa’s nostrils flare.

‘You’re right,’ I said. ‘Family doesn’t.’

For a second nobody moved. The refrigerator hummed. A car horn sounded three floors below. Somewhere in the building, someone dragged a trash bin down the corridor and the wheels thudded over a seam in the tile.

Vanessa recovered first.

‘Unlock the laptop.’

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‘No.’

‘Rebook the house.’

‘No.’

Dad spread his hands like he was dealing with a child having a tantrum. ‘Jason, enough.’

That almost made me laugh. Enough. As if I were the one who had performed for a crowd with a child’s gift in my hand.

‘Get out,’ I said.

He stared at me, waiting for the old version of me to appear. The one who negotiated. The one who softened first. When it did not happen, his face changed by degrees. The cheeks went darker. The jaw tightened. He looked older than he had the day before.

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