When My Sister’s Boyfriend Saw What My Family Did At Dinner That Night-xurixuri

The first thing I remember is not the pain.

It is the taste.

Blood has a metallic taste that turns your mouth into a place you no longer recognize, sharp and hot and coppery, as if you bit down on a penny and could not let go.

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I remember the smell of roasted chicken still sitting in the center of the table.

I remember lemon polish on the mahogany.

I remember the soft clink of crystal that had not yet stopped shaking after my chair hit the floor.

Most of all, I remember the laughter.

That dinner was supposed to be about Madison.

In my family, most dinners were.

My sister had always known how to walk into a room and make the room rearrange itself around her, as if every chair, every lamp, every conversation had been waiting for her permission to begin.

My mother called it confidence.

My father called it charm.

I learned early to call it weather.

You did not argue with weather in our house.

You watched the sky, measured the pressure, and tried not to get struck.

Her new boyfriend was named Travis, and according to Madison, he was exactly the kind of man our family had been waiting to admire.

He worked at Goldman Sachs.

He wore a watch my father noticed before he noticed Travis’s face.

He had that clean, expensive look some men carry into a room like a credential.

Madison announced all of this before his coat was even off.

My mother, Eleanor, gave a little gasp of delight, the way she did when money was close enough to flatter her.

My father shook Travis’s hand too long and too hard, smiling like he was being interviewed for a better life.

I stood near the hallway with my work tote on my shoulder and a coat that still smelled faintly like rain.

No one asked about my day.

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