What she didn’t yet know was that by sunset, Lily would refuse to answer their calls—and her parents would come looking for Nora again.
Part 3
Nora spent her first evening in the studio sitting cross-legged on the floor, eating takeout noodles straight from the carton because she hadn’t unpacked the dishes yet. The space was small enough that she could touch both walls if she stretched her arms. The refrigerator hummed loudly. The bathroom light flickered before stabilizing. It wasn’t glamorous, not permanent, and not at all what she had imagined for herself at thirty-eight.
But it was peaceful.
No one else had a key. No one expected her to fund their mistakes before she even put her bag down. No one waited in another room to tell her duty mattered more than choice.
At 8:12 p.m., her phone began ringing.
First her mother. Then her father. Then both repeatedly. Then Lily.
Nora stared at the screen until it stopped.
A minute later, a message appeared from Lily: Don’t drag me into this. I can’t have them at the bakery. Customers are here.
Nora read it twice and let out a dry laugh.
There it was—the entire family dynamic in one sentence. Lily could receive everything and still avoid inconvenience. Nora could be given nothing and still be expected to carry the crisis.
She placed the phone face down.
The next morning, the calls resumed, but their tone had shifted. Less anger. More pressure.