The announcement of a family meeting scheduled for Sunday afternoon immediately unsettled me, because my father had always guarded his Sundays with almost ceremonial rigidity, reserving those hours for golf broadcasts, financial newspapers, and the comfortable illusion that the world could be organized into neat columns of logic. If he was willing to disrupt that sacred routine, experience had taught me that the purpose was never collaborative discussion, but rather a carefully staged performance requiring witnesses instead of participants. I sat on my parents’ aging floral couch, the same scratchy piece of furniture that had dominated the living room since my adolescence, cradling a cup of coffee that had long since surrendered its warmth, while familiar domestic scents hovered heavily in the air, including roasted meat, citrus cleaner, and the powdery perfume my mother had worn so consistently that it seemed woven into the house itself.
My father stood near the fireplace with an air of rehearsed authority, while my mother perched tensely at the edge of her armchair, fingers knotted within the hem of her cardigan. My older brother Brandon paced restlessly across the carpet, jaw clenched with that familiar tension suggesting both anticipation and irritation, while his wife Nicole sat upright beside my mother, both hands protectively curved around the gentle rise of her pregnancy. The child she carried had become the silent gravitational center of every recent interaction, bending conversations, expectations, and even basic decency toward its existence.
“Thank you all for coming,” my father began, his voice polished with professional cadence rather than familial warmth. “We need to address the Harbor Street apartment situation.” My stomach tightened instantly, because I understood exactly which property he referenced without needing clarification, the red brick building at 742 Harbor Street, with its narrow vestibule tiled in faded black and white squares, and its slightly crooked silver mailboxes bearing the name of my late grandfather. “I have lived there for nearly five years,” I said carefully, already sensing the direction of his speech.
“That arrangement has functioned perfectly well until now.” My father folded his hands behind his back, assuming the posture he typically adopted when delivering decisions disguised as proposals. “As everyone here understands,” he continued, “the two bedroom unit has been part of the family asset structure since your grandfather acquired the building decades ago.” His gaze drifted briefly toward Nicole’s stomach, then returned to me with measured deliberation. “Brandon and Nicole are expecting their first child, and therefore require additional living space beyond their current apartment.”
“There are several available chairs here,” I thought absurdly, recalling similar conversations where logic bent inconveniently beneath entitlement.