His Brother Mocked His Kids At Midnight, Then Asked For Tuition-heyily

At our New Year’s Eve party, my brother stood up and said, “These are my brother’s kids — no medals, no talent, just like their mom.”

Then he pointed to his own son and said, “Now that’s what success looks like.”

Everyone laughed.

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I smiled, raised my glass, and said, “Cheers—this is the last time any of you will see us.”

Then I took my children and left.

An hour later, my brother texted, “You’re still covering my son’s college, right?”

I read it in my kitchen under the pale light above the sink, with fireworks still cracking over the neighborhood, and for a moment I did not move.

The dining room at my parents’ house had smelled like cinnamon candles, champagne, and roast beef kept warm too long.

My mother had put out the good plates because New Year’s Eve was one of the few nights she still believed could make us look like a family.

There were paper crowns on the sideboard, plastic noisemakers in a bowl, and the countdown show playing silently on the TV above the fireplace.

My kids had been happy when we arrived.

Ben had brought the small card game he liked to teach people.

Talia had worn her paper crown from the second we walked in, even though one side had folded over after my parents’ dog stepped on it.

Lena smiled politely through the usual comments.

Nick arrived late, loud, and pleased with himself.

That was my brother’s pattern.

He entered rooms like they owed him a reaction.

For years, I had helped him clean up the consequences.

A late rent payment.

A car repair he somehow never budgeted for.

A summer program for Luca that “would look good later.”

The first deposit for Luca’s college.

I told myself I did it for my nephew.

That was true, but it was not the whole truth.

I also did it because my mother knew exactly which version of me to call when she wanted something.

Good uncle.

Responsible son.

The one who could afford it.

The one who should understand.

Those words sound warm until they become a leash.

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