Her Birthday Cake Was Paid With Medicine Money—Then The Salon Decline Exposed Everything-QuynhTranJP

Mom’s call filled my phone screen for the fourth time, her contact photo smiling up from the table beside my cold coffee.

I watched it ring.

The hospital break room smelled like burnt toast, floor cleaner, and the bitter edge of coffee left too long on the warmer. My scrub top was creased across the stomach from twelve hours of bending, lifting, charting, and pretending my knees did not ache. A vending machine buzzed against the wall. Someone’s microwave noodles hissed behind me.

Image

The phone stopped.

Three seconds later, it started again.

Then Brooke called.

Then Dad.

Then Brooke again.

I turned the phone over and finished the last sip of coffee. It had gone sour and lukewarm, but my hands stayed steady around the paper cup.

Across the group chat, the typing bubbles kept appearing and vanishing. Mom would start something, erase it. Brooke would start something, erase it. Dad sent one single message.

Call your mother.

I didn’t.

At 7:26 a.m., Brooke’s fiancé, Austin, wrote again.

I’m driving over there now.

That was when Brooke finally stopped pretending she was confused.

A voicemail appeared from her number. I pressed play and held the phone flat on the table.

Her voice came out bright and thin.

“You made this look worse than it is. You know Mom gets dramatic about medicine. It was one party. One. You always have to punish people.”

Behind her, I heard a car door slam and a man’s voice say her name.

The voicemail ended.

I wiped a dried coffee ring from the table with a brown napkin, folded it twice, and opened the folder again.

MEDICINE MONEY.

Four files were already there.

But there was a fifth one I had not sent yet.

The receipt from Party Palace Events.

Not the invoice.

The receipt.

I had downloaded it after calling their after-hours billing line from my car at 12:14 a.m. The woman who answered sounded sleepy until I gave her the confirmation number from the bank alert. Then her keyboard started clicking. She asked for my email. She asked if I was the cardholder. I said yes.

At 12:22 a.m., the receipt landed in my inbox.

It showed the $620 party package.

Pink custom cake upgrade.

Gold balloon wall.

Champagne tower rental.

Rush fee.

And at the bottom, under “customer notes,” someone had typed:

Read More