My Parents Made Me Second Until Their Crisis Needed My Savings-olive

My mother did not raise her voice when she told me where I ranked.

That made it worse.

A shouted insult can be blamed on temper, wine, a bad hour, a sentence thrown too fast to catch.

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My mother’s sentence had been polished before it ever touched the Thanksgiving table.

“Your sister’s family will always be the priority,” she said, while gravy cooled in a porcelain boat shaped like a turkey. “She has children. A household. Real responsibilities. You’ll always be second.”

My father nodded.

“That’s just how it is, son.”

I was twenty-eight years old, sitting at the same dining room table where I had once done elementary school worksheets while Madison practiced piano in the next room and everyone clapped when she finished.

The house smelled like sage, butter, cinnamon candles, and the lemon polish Mom used only when she wanted guests to believe we had always been gentle with one another.

The television in the den was playing football too loud.

My nephew ran a toy fire truck along the baseboards and made siren sounds through his teeth.

Madison sat closest to Mom, as usual.

Her husband, Grant, leaned back in his chair with the tired confidence of a man who had never needed to wonder whether he would be rescued.

I had brought a cheap pumpkin pie from Kroger because Mom said, every year, “Don’t bring anything,” and then punished people quietly when they believed her.

Madison had brought three homemade desserts.

Each was in a glass dish with a ribbon around the lid.

Mom looked at my store label and smiled with her lips only.

“That’s fine, honey. We’ll put it in the garage fridge.”

That was our family’s whole theology in one word.

Fine.

Fine meant acceptable enough to tolerate.

Fine meant not special.

Fine meant Nathan brought what Nathan could bring, and everyone would be kind enough not to say it was less.

Dinner began with Madison’s kitchen remodel.

She wanted white oak cabinets.

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