My Parents Sold My Car on My Birthday, Demanded $6,000 for My Brother, Then Begged Me to Fix What I Left Behind-iwachan

The number on my phone belonged to someone named Mr. Holloway.

I knew him only because I had seen his name on documents my father told me not to worry about.

He was my father’s accountant.

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Not a close family friend. Not someone who called on holidays. Not someone who had ever once asked how I was doing.

So when his message appeared at 8:17 a.m., I understood something had gone very wrong.

“Ava, please answer. Your father says only you can fix this.”

I sat on Jenna’s couch, still wearing yesterday’s black café shirt, with my backpack half-open at my feet.

My phone kept buzzing.

Mom.

Dad.

Tyler.

Mom again.

Jenna came out of her bedroom wearing an oversized sweatshirt, hair pulled into a messy bun, eyes still half asleep.

She looked at the phone, then at me.

“Don’t answer your dad,” she said.

“I’m not going to.”

But I kept staring at Mr. Holloway’s message.

That one felt different.

My father could yell. My mother could cry. Tyler could panic because panic had always worked for him.

But an accountant did not send emotional messages at eight in the morning unless numbers had stopped behaving.

Jenna sat beside me without touching me.

“What did you leave?” she asked.

I looked toward my laptop.

“A folder.”

“What kind of folder?”

“The kind my dad thought I would never understand.”

For almost two years, I had helped him with paperwork for his handyman side business.

He called it helping.

At first, I believed him.

He would come home smelling like sawdust and gasoline, throw a stack of receipts on the kitchen table, and say, “You’re good with computers.”

So I scanned receipts.

I organized invoices.

I emailed forms.

I made spreadsheets because he said hiring office help was too expensive.

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