My mom screamed, “Get out and never come back” — and three weeks later, my dad called asking why I’d stopped paying their mortgage.-luna

“Because you told me to leave.”

I said it quietly.

There was a long pause on the phone.

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Not the kind where someone is thinking.

The kind where the truth finally lands.

My dad cleared his throat.

“That doesn’t have anything to do with the mortgage,” he said.

I looked out the cheap hotel window at the hospital parking lot across the street.

A nurse in gray scrubs was walking in with a paper coffee cup and tired shoulders.

It felt like looking at a version of myself from a week earlier.

“It has everything to do with the mortgage,” I said.

“You told me I was no longer part of that house.”

“That’s not what your mother meant.”

I almost laughed.

That sentence had covered half my life.

That’s not what she meant.

That’s not what he meant.

That’s not what Jason meant.

But somehow, what they said always counted.

What I felt never did.

I sat down on the edge of the bed.

The comforter was thin and scratchy, and the room smelled faintly like detergent and old air conditioning.

I had slept there for nineteen nights.

Not because I loved it.

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