The first thing I remember from that morning was not anger. It was the sound of my mother’s voice coming through my smartphone speaker, soft and casual, as if she were talking about what to bring to Sunday dinner. “You’re single, so you don’t need a house this big, Jenny.
We’re family. Of course it should be shared, right?”
My mother, Diane Ford, had a way of turning unreasonable things into ordinary sentences. She could say the most stunning thing in the same tone she used to remind someone to pick up milk.
That was the trick of it. If she sounded calm enough, if she acted as if everything had already been decided by decent people, then anyone who objected became the difficult one. She knew perfectly well that it was the day I was moving into my new home.
Not just any home. My home. The home I had bought after six years of saving nearly every spare dollar I earned, after turning down vacations, after eating grocery-store soup at midnight because I had spent fourteen hours on a muddy job site and could barely stand long enough to cook.