After Thanksgiving, His Family Learned What Always Second Costs-chloe

The gravy was cooling in the little porcelain turkey when Nathan first heard his place in the family spoken out loud.

That was what stayed with him.

Not his mother’s pearl earrings catching the chandelier light.

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Not his father’s napkin folded with the slow finality of a man who believed he had ended the discussion.

Not Madison cutting turkey into careful squares while her husband Grant kept eating.

The gravy.

It had already formed a skin across the top, brown and glossy, with one thin curl of steam rising from the spout before disappearing into the warm dining room air.

The house smelled like sage, butter, cinnamon candles, and lemon polish.

The television in the den was too loud because his father liked football loud enough to make conversation optional.

His nephew was running a toy fire truck along the baseboards, whispering siren sounds under his breath.

Everything looked normal.

That was how Nathan had been fooled for years.

Normal, in his parents’ house, meant Madison sat closest to their mother.

Normal meant Grant leaned back in his chair like a man who had been welcomed before he ever earned it.

Normal meant Madison’s kids could leave fingerprints on windows, knock napkins to the floor, and interrupt adults without anyone calling it rude.

Normal meant Nathan was asked about traffic.

He was twenty-eight then, working late nights at a software company, living in an apartment that was too far from the office and too close to the feeling that nothing in his life had room to breathe.

He had brought a cheap pumpkin pie from Kroger because he knew his mother.

She would say dessert was not necessary.

Then she would notice if nobody brought any.

He set the pie on the counter beside three glass dishes Madison had tied with ribbon.

His mother glanced at the store label.

“That’s fine, honey,” she said. “We’ll put it in the garage fridge.”

Fine.

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