After I spent $77,000 covering my brother’s wedding, he deliberately sent me to the wrong city in Italy as a joke. I landed alone in Naples while the real celebration was happening in Florence. The next day, he texted, “LOL, I just didn’t want to invite you,” and my mother piled on by saying the whole mess was somehow my fault. I didn’t argue. I didn’t beg. I smiled, came home, and had a four-foot gift delivered straight to her door. When she saw it, she broke down crying and called me asking, “Can I please pay you back?”
The first time Ethan humiliated me, I was seven and wearing a paper Burger King crown. He told our cousins I’d wet my pants at school. I hadn’t. Everyone laughed anyway. My mother laughed too. Not big. Just enough to tell me where she stood.
At twenty-five, I should’ve known Italy wouldn’t be different.
The taxi dropped me in Naples. The wedding was in Florence.
I stood outside a cheap hotel with my suitcase in one hand and my phone in the other, staring at the wrong address. The confirmation email Ethan sent was real. The hotel was real. The lie was cleaner than that. He’d sent me to the wrong city on purpose. The next morning, the light in my new apartment came in exactly the way she had hoped.
Cold. Clear. Unapologetic.
It hit the floor and stayed.
And so did I