З життя
On the Day I Delivered a Cake to My Sister, My Key Got Stuck in the Front Door in the Most Peculiar Way
On the day I took the cake to my sisters house, my key jammed oddly in the front door. I thought it was the coldthough outside, it was a gentle March afternoon. In one hand, I was balancing the cake box; in the other, a bouquet of tulips wrapped in cheap, crinkling cellophane.
I was already ten minutes late for Emilys birthday. Not because I didnt want to be on time, but because, just before I left, my son spilled juice all over my new blouse and I had to change.
As soon as I stepped inside, I caught the smell of roast peppers and butter. Cutlery clattered somewhere in the kitchen, and someone in the lounge laughed a touch too loudly, as if just to be noticed.
Emily glanced at me, then looked at the clock on the wall.
Well, at least you made it, she said, straightening her sleeve. I thought thered be some silly drama again.
I gave her one of those smiles that aches at the corners of your mouth.
I brought the cakeand the flowers.
She took the bouquet without bothering to smell it and dropped it on the hall cabinet as if it were a bill. Then she grabbed the cake and called out to her husband:
Oliver, take this into the kitchen before she drops it again.
I hadnt ever dropped anything, but I said nothing.
In the lounge were my mum, my aunt, and our cousin. Mum looked up at me and only nodded. Next to her, on the tiny table, lay our old family photo albumthe one with faded brown covers wed kept for years.
My stomach tightened a little. Emily always brought out this album when she wanted to remind everyone who was the successful daughter and who wasnt.
I took a seat at the edge of the sofa. The chair beside me squeaked as Oliver nudged it with his foot to pass by. Somehow, everyone in that house managed to make a commotion around me, without ever actually touching me.
Moments later, Emily opened the album and began showing photos.
Look at this, she beamed. Me at prom. And this is Lucylooking a bit off with that odd haircut.
Everyone chuckledeven mum.
I glanced at the photograph. I was eighteen, wearing a cheap blue dress Id picked out because we couldnt afford another. I remembered crying quietly in the bathroom that night after hearing mum tell our neighbour that at least Emily carried herself well, while I was the quieter child.
Youve always been rather peculiar, mum added, putting her phone down. Even when you were little, you seemed weighed down by everything.
I dont know why, but something shifted inside me at that moment. Maybe it was the tone. Maybe because I was thirty-seven, and still sitting there like a schoolchild waiting for approval.
Was I the burden? I asked quietly.
The room fell silent. Only the clock ticked.
Emily gave me a sharp look.
Come on, dont start. Its a celebration.
Im not starting, I said. I just want, for once, not to be finished off by someone else.
Mum sighed, making a show of it.
Are you playing the victim again?
That struck harder than everything else. It wasnt new. It was something Id heard all my life.
When I was quietI was cold. When I helpedit was just out of habit. When I withdrewI was ungrateful. Whatever I did, it always seemed I wasnt enough.
My eyes landed on the album. Between two pages, there was a small folded note. Id never seen it before.
I pulled it out without thinking. The handwriting was unmistakeably Dads.
For Lucybecause she always yields first, but feels most deeply.
My hands tingled. Dad had passed away years ago. He rarely said much, but when he did, his words lingered.
Whats that? Emily asked.
I swallowed.
Something, it seems, that wasnt meant for all.
Mum turned pale. I noticed her avoid my gaze.
He was always too soft on you, she said curtly.
Then I understood something that had frightened me for so long. The problem wasnt that I was weak. The problem was Id endured for too many years, just to preserve a peace that was never real.
I rose. Smoothed my beige cardigan and picked up the bouquet from the hall cabinet.
The cake stays. I dont.
Emily pursed her lips.
Really? Youre leaving over a piece of paper?
I looked at her calmly.
No. Over everything it confirmed.
Mum didnt say stay. That was the most honest gesture shed given me in years.
I left without slamming the door. On the stairs, there was a whiff of stew from the neighbours and cleaning fluid. The cellophane rustled in my hand, and my chest felt strangely light.
Sometimes dignity doesnt arrive with a grand gesture. Sometimes it slips in quietly, once you finally leave the place where youre always made to feel small.
Would you remain where your own family laughs at your hurt?
