I Sent My Parents $550 Every Friday Until They Skipped Her Birthday-thuyhien

Every Friday at exactly nine in the morning, $550 left Sarah’s checking account.

It happened so regularly that she could feel it before the banking alert arrived.

A tiny buzz on her phone.

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A quiet drop in her balance.

Another week of telling herself that good daughters do not keep score.

The first time she set up the transfer, she had cried into the cuff of her sweater at the kitchen table.

Marcus was asleep on the couch after an early shift, one arm hanging over the side, his work boots still by the door.

Their daughter Lily was a toddler then, curled under a blanket with stuffed animals pressed around her like a soft little wall.

Sarah remembered staring at the screen and feeling almost proud.

Her father’s hours had been cut.

Her mother said the salon was slow, too slow, the kind of slow that made her voice thin and shaky over the phone.

They had raised Sarah on rules, casseroles, church-basement manners, and the idea that family was supposed to step in before the world got too cold.

So Sarah stepped in.

She did not ask for receipts.

She did not ask why they needed exactly that much.

She did not ask whether Danny, her older brother, was helping too.

She typed in the account number and told herself she was doing something decent.

Family helps family.

For a long time, that sentence worked like a bandage.

It covered the sting.

It covered the stress.

It covered the way Marcus’s shoulders tightened every time Friday came around.

Three years later, the bandage had worn through.

Helping looked like rent being late again.

It looked like Sarah standing in the grocery aisle with a calculator open on her phone, putting back strawberries because Lily did not really need them.

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