Her Brother’s Wedding Invite Exposed the Lie Her Family Buried-chloe

My name is Ava Reynolds, and I am thirty-two years old, but I still carry a two-dollar bill in the back pocket of my wallet.

It is not lucky.

It is not a sweet family keepsake.

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It is not one of those odd bills people save because a grandparent gave it to them at Christmas or because it came from some little county fair booth on a summer night.

Mine is soft from being unfolded in bathroom stalls, college dorm rooms, grocery store parking lots, courthouse hallways, rented apartments, and offices where people told me I seemed stronger than I was.

The corners are worn almost round.

The green ink has faded in the middle where my thumb always rubs it.

Most people would see it and think I kept it because two-dollar bills are unusual.

They would be wrong.

I keep it because when I was fourteen, my father shoved it into my palm at a gas station off I-76 and told me to man up and find my own ride home.

I was not a man.

I was not even close to grown.

I was a skinny eighth-grade girl in a gray hoodie, wearing cheap sneakers with one lace that never stayed tied, carrying no phone because my mother said phones made kids selfish.

It was late October, the kind of Pennsylvania night where the cold feels damp, like it has fingers.

The gas station lights buzzed above me until the sound felt like it was pressing against my skull.

Diesel fumes sat heavy in the air.

Somewhere behind the building, a dumpster lid banged open and shut in the wind.

That sound stayed with me longer than my father’s voice did.

We had been coming home from visiting my father’s cousin near Harrisburg.

My older brother Tyler was seventeen then, broad-shouldered and charming in that easy way some boys learn when every adult laughs before they even finish a sentence.

He had control of the music, like always.

He kept playing the same song over and over, singing louder each time because he knew it annoyed me.

I asked him to stop.

He turned it up.

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