My father’s voice rang across my own dining room as my mother sat stiffly beside him, nodding like he had just said something reasonable instead of completely absurd. The dinner I had prepared was still untouched, and my sister Alyssa sat across from me, quietly satisfied, her engagement ring catching the light like she had planned this moment perfectly.
I had invited them over because my mother said we needed a “peaceful family discussion.” I should have known better. In our family, “peaceful” usually meant an ambush wrapped in politeness.
“So what exactly are you expecting from me?” I asked, even though I already knew.
“We’re not asking,” my mother said.
“We’re expecting it. Alyssa’s wedding is in October, and we can’t handle the cost alone.”
That was ironic—especially since they were living in the house I had bought, furnished, and maintained. What was supposed to be a six-week stay had stretched into eight months, and now they acted like everything in my life belonged to them.
And yes, I did—but only because I had spent years building my career, working tirelessly to get where I was.
Alyssa, on the other hand, had drifted from job to job until she found her fiancé, Brent—a man full of big talk and empty finances.