I returned from a business trip and was stunned to find my parents’ house empty. My sister had secretly put them in a nursing home while I was away and now she planned to sell their house behind our backs! She thought she’d won, but she had no idea what was coming.
I always thought family meant something. That blood ran thicker than water or money, or whatever else people chased after. That’s just the way I was brought up.
Mom and Dad had worked their fingers to the bone their whole lives, running that little convenience store on Cherry Street, just to give Emily and me a shot at college and a better life. The store wasn’t much to look at, but I loved working there after school. I was proud to be part of something that put food on our table and paid for our textbooks.
But Emily? She saw things differently. While I worked in the store, Emily would be hanging out with her popular friends or attending wild parties.
She was ashamed of the shop and our “poor parents.”
When our parents reminded her that the shop provided everything for us and allowed them to save for our future, Emily was the type of person who screamed, “Who asked you to?”
I wish I could say she grew out of it, but even now, Emily saw herself as the sun: a bright, golden light the rest of us revolved around. Nonetheless, when I had to leave town for a two-week business trip, Emily was my only option for checking in on our parents. I caught her at her favorite bar, perched on a stool like some corporate queen, scrolling through her phone while the bartender hovered nearby, clearly used to her demanding presence.
“You want me to what?” She didn’t even try to hide her disgust. “I have meetings all week. Besides, they’re fine on their own.”
“They’re not fine,” I said.
“Dad forgot to take his heart meds twice last week. Mom’s arthritis is getting worse. They need someone to look in on them.”
She rolled her eyes so hard I thought they might get stuck.
“God, you’re such a drama queen. They managed the store for 30 years. They can handle two weeks without your mothering.”
“Emily, please.
It’s two weeks. Just stop by every couple of days, make sure they’re eating, and check their meds. That’s all I’m asking.”
That’s when something shifted.
A grin spread across her face, slow and sweet as honey. “Fine. You know what?
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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