Nora didn’t move. “I moved out.”
“You abandoned us.”
“No,” she said. “I declined to become your long-term solution.”
Her mother clutched the envelope without opening it, already shaking with anger. “After everything we did for you?”
That almost made Nora laugh, though there was nothing amusing about it.
Because that sentence had always been the foundation of their parenting. Not love freely given, but love recorded on an invisible ledger, brought out whenever obedience was expected. And the truth was, if that ledger were ever calculated honestly, it would not favor them.
Nora had worked weekends through college while Lily received spending money “to focus on her future.” Nora drove their mother to appointments, handled insurance paperwork after her father’s surgery, and mailed vendor checks when Lily’s bakery started missing deadlines. She carried the emotional load, the practical load, and often the financial one. Lily received encouragement. Nora inherited obligation.
Now the pattern had reached its final form: they had gambled their stability on the favored child, and when it failed, they expected the dependable one to absorb the consequences.
Across the street, Mr. Calloway lingered at his mailbox, pretending not to watch. Good, Nora thought. Let there be witnesses.
Her father lowered his voice, which felt more threatening than shouting. “We sold our house because family supports family.”
“No,” Nora replied. “You sold your house because you trusted Lily’s promises more than reality.”
“That’s your sister!”