PART 3: I Drove 7 Hours Home For A Family Reunion. When I Asked My Parents If I Could Stay The Night, They Said: “Sure. Sleep On The Floor With The Dog And Pay $600 For Accommodation.” My Parents Laughed. My Sister Lives There For Free. I Said: “Then Leave This House Within 24 Hours.”

I Drove 7 Hours Home For A Family Reunion. When I Asked My Parents If I Could Stay The Night, They Said: “Sure. Sleep On The Floor With The Dog And Pay $600 For Accommodation.” My Parents Laughed. My Sister Lives There For Free. I Said: “Then Leave This House Within 24 Hours.”

Part 1

By the time I reached my parents’ house, my legs had gone numb from the seven-hour drive, my coffee had turned bitter in the cup holder, and the back of my neck felt stiff enough to crack.

The neighborhood looked smaller than I remembered.

That was the first thing that unsettled me.

The maple trees lining Briarwood Lane still leaned over the road like old neighbors whispering secrets. The mailboxes still had peeling numbers. The McAllisters’ white picket fence was still crooked on the left side, as if nobody had bothered fixing it in twelve years. But the house itself, the cream-colored two-story colonial at the end of the cul-de-sac, looked almost harmless in the late afternoon light.

Harmless things are always the worst at pretending.

I parked behind a silver SUV I didn’t recognize and sat there with both hands on the steering wheel. The engine clicked softly as it cooled. Somewhere nearby, somebody was mowing a lawn, and the smell of cut grass drifted through my cracked window.

For one foolish second, I let myself imagine a different version of the day.

My mother opening the door with red eyes, saying, Hillary, we should’ve called sooner.

My father clearing his throat and carrying my suitcase without being asked.

My younger sister Nicole giving me a stiff hug and saying, We were stupid kids back then.

I almost laughed at myself.

Still, I got out.

The suitcase wheels rattled over the uneven driveway, too loud in the quiet. I could see the front curtains move before I even reached the porch. Someone was watching.

I rang the bell.

The door opened so quickly it felt rehearsed.

My mother stood there first, smaller than I remembered but still perfectly arranged. Her gray-blonde hair was curled away from her face. Her lipstick was the same dusty rose shade she used to wear to church. Behind her, my father stood in a navy polo, arms crossed over his chest. Nicole leaned against the hallway wall in designer jeans and a soft-looking cream sweater, her phone already in her hand.

Nobody smiled.

“Well,” my mother said, her eyes moving from my face to my suitcase. “Hillary. You came.”

Not welcome home.

Not you made it safely.

Just you came, like I was an overdue package.

“I did,” I said.

My father nodded once. “Long drive?”

“Seven hours.”

“Traffic’s bad these days,” he said, then stepped aside without touching my bag.

The inside of the house smelled exactly the same: lemon furniture polish, old carpet, and the faint wet-dog smell that used to cling to the mudroom. Max, their golden retriever, shuffled out from the kitchen, older now, muzzle white, tail wagging carefully when he saw me.

“Hi, Max,” I whispered, bending to rub his head.

He leaned against my leg like I had never left.

That almost broke me.

Nicole made a small sound through her nose. “He’ll take attention from anyone.”

I straightened. “Good to see you too, Nicole.”

Her smile sharpened. “Is it?”

My mother closed the door behind me with a soft click. “Let’s not start. The lawyer said we need everyone here by six. There are documents related to your grandmother’s estate, and apparently your confirmation is required.”

There it was.

Not an invitation. A summons.

Two months earlier, when my mother texted that the family wanted me at a reunion, I had stared at the message for almost ten minutes. They had not called me on birthdays. They had not sent Christmas cards. When I graduated college, only my grandmother called. When I got my first real job, nobody from this house knew.

But “family reunion” had done something embarrassing to me.

It had opened a door I thought I had nailed shut.

I looked around the foyer at the framed family photos. Nicole at prom. Nicole at college graduation. Nicole on a beach, laughing with my parents. There was one photo of me, half-hidden behind a ceramic lamp, taken when I was fourteen and still trying to earn a place in the frame.

“Where should I put my suitcase?” I asked.

Nicole’s eyes dropped to it.

A slow smile spread across her face, the kind she used to wear right before she pushed me into trouble and watched everyone blame me for falling.

“You brought luggage?” she asked. “Planning to stay?”

“I drove seven hours,” I said. “I don’t feel safe driving back tonight. I’ll leave first thing in the morning.”

My father’s mouth twitched. My mother glanced at Nicole, not warning her, just waiting.

Nicole folded her arms. “Sure. You can sleep on the floor with the dog.”

My chest tightened.

Part 2 … 

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