AFTER COVERING THE COSTS OF MY BROTHER’S WEDDING, I CHECKED MY ACCOUNT AND FOUND THAT $8.4K HAD VANISHED. THAT WAS THE NIGHT MY FAMILY LEARNED WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THE “RESPONSIBLE ONE” STOPS PLAYING NICE. My name is Beatrice Hayes, but everyone calls me Bea.
I’m thirty-four years old, live in a small two-bedroom apartment outside Columbus, Ohio, and I have spent most of my life being the one who fixes things.
I fix overdrafted accounts. I fix forgotten bills and late notices.
I fix broken-down cars and rent that’s “a little short this month.”
I fix people, too. Or at least I used to try.
That night, though, standing in my parents’ kitchen with my phone in one hand and a drinking glass in the other, I realized I was done.
I didn’t notice my hand trembling until the glass slipped from my fingers and shattered across the kitchen tile. It hit in slow motion, at least that’s how it felt—crystal exploding outward, water rushing over the grout, tiny shards catching the overhead light. Their laughter, sharp, careless, bounced off the cabinets and echoed around me like shards digging into my ribs.
I stared down at my phone.
The glaring red numbers seared into my vision. $8,400.
Gone. Overnight.
I blinked, thinking it had to be a mistake.
A glitch. Something that could be reversed with a polite call to customer service. My brain knew better.
My body already understood.
“Relax,” Mom snorted from the table, swirling her wine like she was in some commercial for expensive Merlot instead of sitting at the same scratched oak table we’d had since I was in middle school. “You always overreact.
Besides…” She lifted her glass toward my brother with a grin. “It’s not like you can do anything about it.”
My brother Daniel smirked without even looking at me, like my panic was background noise.
His new wife, Lily, didn’t bother pretending she wasn’t listening.
She tilted her head toward my phone, eyes sliding over it with lazy amusement. We were all still riding the faint afterglow of their wedding. There were leftover centerpieces crowding the hallway, a tux jacket tossed over the back of the couch, a wrinkled “Just Married” banner drooping above the kitchen entryway.
Their wedding, my gift, my money, my stupid attempt at being the dependable one, had barely ended, and already they’d reached deeper into my pockets than I’d imagined possible.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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