Her Nephew Called Her A Servant At Dinner. By Dawn, Her Sister Panicked – olive

The chair moved before Joanna understood what had happened.

One second, her hand was resting on the polished wood back, her wineglass steady in her other hand.

The next, the chair shot sideways with a violent scrape across the dining room floor.

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Every fork at the Sunday table hesitated.

The sound was not loud in the way a scream is loud.

It was sharper.

It was wood against hardwood, sudden enough to make the candle flames tremble and the water in the glasses ripple.

Joanna felt it in her teeth before she felt it in her chest.

Then she looked down and saw Maverick’s sneaker still extended.

He was eleven years old.

Tall for his age, narrow in the shoulders, sandy-blond hair combed like his mother had checked it three times before arriving.

Sienna always talked about his shoes before she talked about his grades.

They were expensive, white, spotless, and now planted against the leg of Joanna’s chair like he had just done something heroic.

“Servants don’t sit with us,” Maverick said.

The words landed neatly.

Too neatly.

Not shouted.

Not giggled.

Not tossed out in the silly cruelty of a child testing a boundary.

He said it like a line he had practiced because someone had made it safe for him to believe.

Then he looked straight at Joanna and added, “Mom said so.”

The table froze.

Seventeen people sat under the warm gold light of Joanna’s mother’s dining room, surrounded by roast ham, glazed carrots, potatoes shining with butter, and candles that smelled faintly of vanilla.

The house looked expensive because everyone wanted it to look expensive.

The silver had been polished.

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