The Son They Put Second Had Receipts When the Bills Came Due-hothiyenvy_5

My mother told me, “Your sister’s family will always be the priority, and you’ll always be second,” while Thanksgiving gravy cooled in a porcelain boat shaped like a turkey.

That is still the detail I remember most.

Not the chandelier light on her pearl earrings.

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Not my father’s slow nod.

Not Madison staring down at her plate like the table had suddenly become the safest place to look.

The gravy.

It had a skin forming over the top, glossy and brown, untouched between the mashed potatoes and the green bean casserole.

The house smelled like sage, butter, cinnamon candles, and lemon polish.

The TV in the den was too loud because Dad always said football was part of Thanksgiving, even when nobody was watching.

My nephew dragged a toy fire truck along the baseboard and made little siren noises with his mouth.

Everything looked normal.

That was how my family did cruelty best.

They put it in a clean room, under warm light, beside a holiday centerpiece, and then acted surprised when you noticed.

I was twenty-eight and tired from a week of late nights at the software company where I worked.

I had brought a pumpkin pie from Kroger because my mother always told people not to bring anything, then found a way to make them regret it if they arrived empty-handed.

Madison had brought three homemade desserts in glass dishes with ribbons around the lids.

My mother looked at my plastic grocery-store container and smiled with only her mouth.

“That’s fine, honey,” she said.

She put my pie in the garage fridge.

Madison’s dishes went on the dining room buffet.

That was our family in miniature.

Madison displayed.

Me stored somewhere colder.

My sister had always been the center of the house.

When she turned sixteen, my parents bought her a blue Honda Civic with a ribbon on the hood.

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