Her Birthday Trust Was Gone, And One Folder Exposed The Family Lie-yumihong

On my thirty-second birthday, my grandfather asked me to explain what I had done with fifty-eight million dollars.

He said it in front of my parents.

He said it in front of my younger brother.

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He said it while thirty-two candles were still burning on my birthday cake and the smell of vanilla smoke was hanging over the dining room like something waiting to be named.

“Show me, Emily,” he said, “what you spent the fifty-eight million dollars on.”

For one second, I thought I had misheard him.

Everybody had just finished singing “Happy Birthday.”

My mother had been smiling too hard, the way she did when she wanted a room to behave.

My father had been lifting his wineglass.

My brother Daniel had been leaning back in his chair, talking about his condo and the new furniture he had bought for the living room.

My boyfriend, Ethan, had been sitting beside me, one hand resting on his knee under the table, still trying to figure out which family jokes were safe to laugh at.

Then my grandfather’s words landed.

My father’s glass slipped from his hand and shattered on the hardwood.

The sound was small compared to what came after, but it changed the room completely.

My mother went white.

Daniel stopped moving.

Ethan reached under the table and found my hand, his thumb pressing once against my knuckles like a question he did not know how to ask.

I looked at my grandfather.

“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” I said.

My voice sounded thin, almost childish, and I hated that.

“I never received any trust.”

The whole dining room froze.

The candles kept burning.

Wax rolled down the side of the cake and pooled in a soft white ridge on the frosting.

A piece of broken glass near my father’s shoe rocked once, then settled.

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