“Item One. Wedding photo. Returned. June 2017,” I narrated. “Item Sixteen. Paige’s text calling my children ‘not real.’ Item Twenty-Three. The card you let Dad open but forced him to return.”
Diane’s face turned the color of ash. Her theatrical tears began to well up—the same tears she used to manipulate my father for decades. “I was hurt, Iris! You chose him! I was upset!”
“You weren’t upset, Diane,” I said, using her first name for the first time. “You were calculating. You stayed away when you thought we were poor, and you only showed up when you realized we were the biggest winners in town.”
I flipped to the last page—the screenshots of the group chat. I saw her eyes lock onto her own words: She can afford to help her family.
The kitchen went deathly silent. The mask of the “grieving mother” finally slipped, revealing the sharp, jagged edges of the woman underneath.
“After everything we did for you,” she hissed, the lavender scent of her cardigan suddenly feeling like poison. “The food, the clothes… this is how you repay us?”
“You raised me,” I replied. “That’s a duty, not a debt. And I don’t owe you a single cent for a childhood you used as a down payment on my future silence.”