The Certified Letter Hit Their Mailbox Before Eric Could Delete His Comments-olive

The attorney did not tell me to calm down.

She did not pat my hand or give me a speech about family. She simply rotated the blue folder toward me, tapped the stack of receipts with her silver pen, and said, “This is not a son being petty. This is a financial record.”

The office smelled like printer toner, rain-soaked wool coats, and the sharp peppermint gum her assistant kept chewing behind the reception desk. Outside the ninth-floor window, downtown traffic crawled under a gray 10:12 a.m. sky. My coffee had gone cold beside my elbow, but I kept both hands around the paper cup because I needed something that would not vibrate, ring, or demand money.

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My phone lit again.

Another Facebook notification.

Dad had written: Some children forget who fed them.

Eric had commented under it: Facts. Imagine making your parents beg.

The attorney read it over my shoulder without leaning too close. Her face barely moved.

“Do you want this handled as a social argument,” she asked, “or as a documented repayment demand?”

I looked at the certified letter in her assistant’s hand. White envelope. Green card attached. My parents’ address typed cleanly in the center. No anger. No insult. Just proof, postage, and consequence.

“Documented,” I said.

She nodded once.

The letter went out at 10:26 a.m.

By 1:43 p.m., Eric deleted his comment.

I knew because my cousin Melissa sent me a screenshot before it disappeared. She had circled his words in red and added, He is already cleaning up.

I sat in my car outside the attorney’s building, the heater blowing dry air against my knuckles, and watched the first crack open in the version of the story they had built. Dad’s post was still up. Mom had added a crying-face emoji under it. Three of her friends had written things like Praying for you and Shame on ungrateful children.

Then Melissa posted one sentence of her own.

Before everyone attacks Jake, maybe ask why he has five years of mortgage receipts.

The comments slowed.

Not stopped.

Slowed.

That was enough.

At 3:08 p.m., my mother called from a number I had not blocked yet. I let it ring twice, then answered without saying her name.

Her breathing came through first. Thin. Controlled. Prepared.

“Jake,” she said, “what did you send us?”

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