For twenty-four consecutive months, I transferred exactly one thousand five hundred dollars to my mother. Every payment arrived like clockwork on the first of the month. My bank app would flash the confirmation message, and I felt a mix of guilt and responsibility twist through my stomach. She always said the same thing when she asked. Her voice would quiver as if she were seconds from breaking. She told me she was overwhelmed by debt. She insisted creditors were suffocating her. She reminded me I was her reliable daughter while my brother floated through life without consequence.
I never questioned her. I convinced myself that loyalty required obedience. I swallowed every doubt and tried to forget how the numbers drained from my savings faster than I could replenish them.
My brother, Trevor, never contributed. He never offered. He never apologized for doing nothing. That did not stop him from calling me one Wednesday afternoon with a tone that felt like a punch.
“You think you are the righteous one, Delaney,” he sneered through the phone. “You want applause because you hand Mom a little money. We all know you are just buying her forgiveness and waiting for your inheritance.”
The accusation stung. My fingers tightened around the steering wheel of my parked car. I was outside the grocery store, and the world felt suddenly tilted.
“Trevor, I am trying to help her,” I said. My voice wobbled more than I wished it would.
He laughed. The sound was sharp and cold. “Nobody helps for free. Stop pretending you are the hero. You are the worst sister I ever had.”
Before I could respond, I heard my mother in the background. Her voice, unmistakably hers, was raised to a shout.