Part 2

“Your brother has been between jobs since 2021.”

She flinched like I slapped her.

And for the first time in years, I felt absolutely no guilt.

That evening, Dad called again.

This time I answered.

He sounded smaller somehow.

“Rachel,” he whispered, “I’m sorry.”

I stayed quiet.

He breathed heavily into the phone. “Not just about dinner. About all of it. I let your mother pretend we didn’t need you because I was ashamed. Then I let everyone treat you like the problem because admitting you were the one keeping us afloat was harder.”

His voice cracked.

“I should’ve stopped Mason. I should’ve stopped Derek. I should’ve stopped your brother years ago.”

Rain streaked down my apartment windows while I listened.

“Why didn’t you?” I finally asked.

Silence stretched between us.

Then he answered quietly.

“Because I was weak.”

It was the first truly honest thing anyone in my family said in years.

The ending wasn’t clean or beautiful. Real families rarely break neatly.

Four months later, my parents sold the house. Not because I forced them, but because the numbers finally exposed the truth everyone avoided. They moved into a smaller condo twenty minutes away. Dad took a part-time job managing supplies for a local contractor. Mom stopped hosting Sunday dinners because without the old house, there was no stage left for pretending.

Eric moved out only after Dad demanded rent. He blocked me for six weeks, then eventually unblocked me just to ask if I knew anyone hiring. I never replied.

Lauren sent one apology through email. It was stiff, defensive, and mostly blamed Mason being “influenced by adults.” I responded once.

Then become a better adult.

A month later, Mason mailed me a handwritten apology. He admitted his father told him spitting in my food would be funny. I believed he was sincere, but I also understood repairing what his parents taught him wasn’t my responsibility.

I never restarted the mortgage payments.

I did help Dad once privately—with a budgeting spreadsheet after he respectfully asked and showed me every account honestly. No guilt. No manipulation. No insults disguised as family loyalty.

As for me?

I started spending money on my own life.

I vacationed in Maine.

Bought myself a better car.

Adopted a gray rescue cat named Winston who never once made me earn affection.

The last text Mom ever sent me read:

I miss when we were a family.

I answered:

I miss when I thought we were one.

Then I placed my phone face down, made dinner for myself, and ate every single bite in peace.

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