Mom was baking because she wanted to, not because anyone expected dessert. The kitchen smelled like vanilla and brown sugar. Ben was sneaking cookie dough when her phone rang.
Mom glanced at the screen. “Lydia.” She answered and put it on speaker.
“Kayla,” Lydia said, her voice shaking, “you need to come here. RIGHT NOW.”
We all froze.
“What happened?” Mom asked.
There was a pause.
Then my aunt said something that made Mom go completely still.
“Remember what your ex said about your ‘expiration date’? You need to see what he looks like now.”
Mom said quietly, “We’re coming.”
She hung up.
The drive was silent, except for Owen asking once, “Is he sick?”
Mom kept her eyes on the road. “All I know is I’m not going there to save him.”
“Nobody expects you to,” I said.
Lydia opened the door before we knocked. She looked exhausted. “The surgery didn’t go well.”
Mom froze. We exchanged glances.
“What do you mean?” Mom asked. “What surgery?”
“He spent everything trying not to get old.” Lydia motioned us inside. “Surgeries, treatments, injections, hair restoration, skin tightening—everything. Every time someone promised he’d look younger, he paid.”
“And Tessa?” Nora asked.
“She left as soon as the credit cards ran out.”
Mom didn’t react. “And now?”
“He couldn’t afford his apartment. He’s been here two weeks.”
Then we walked into the living room.
Dad sat in Lydia’s recliner, and for a moment, I didn’t recognize him.
His face looked wrong—tight in some places, pulled in others. One eye slightly off. His cheeks uneven. His hair darker in an unnatural way.
He didn’t look younger.
He looked damaged.
Dad saw us and stood too quickly. “Kayla.”
Mom looked at him. “You’ve been busy.”
He swallowed. “It didn’t go the way I expected. I made mistakes.”
Ben let out a short laugh. “You think?”
Dad ignored him. He kept his eyes on Mom. “I thought maybe we could talk.”
There it was again. The same arrogance. The belief she would still meet him where he stood.
Lydia said nothing. She just watched.