Aunt Patricia’s Easter Question Exposed What My Family Never Saw-heyily

At Easter brunch, Aunt Patricia asked one quiet question, and every version of my family’s story about me fell apart at the table.

The dining room smelled like glazed ham, coffee, lemon polish, and the kind of expensive candle my mother only lit when guests were coming.

Sunlight slipped through the sheer curtains and landed on the Easter table in soft squares, making the silverware shine and the crystal glasses look more delicate than any of us actually were.

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My mother had set out the good plates, the ones with the tiny blue flowers around the rim.

My father sat at the end of the table with a mimosa in one hand and his phone facedown beside his plate, because he considered that restraint.

Jessica sat near the middle, naturally, because somehow every family arrangement bent around her.

I sat two chairs down from Aunt Patricia with my hands folded in my lap, already tired and already telling myself not to be.

I was thirty-two years old, and I still walked into my parents’ house like a kid waiting to find out what kind of daughter I was allowed to be that day.

The answer had been the same for as long as I could remember.

Jessica was the bright one.

Jessica was the social one.

Jessica was the one who made my parents feel successful just by walking through a room.

I was the practical one, the quiet one, the one who did well enough that nobody worried and not loudly enough that anyone celebrated.

When I brought home straight A’s, my mother smiled and said, “That’s nice, dear,” then turned toward Jessica and asked about cheerleading tryouts.

I remember standing there with my backpack still on, the paper warm from my hand, waiting for a second sentence that never came.

When I got into the honors program at UT Austin, my father frowned at the tuition numbers on the acceptance packet and asked if I thought I could get a scholarship or something.

“We’ve got your sister’s wedding to plan,” he said, as if those two things belonged in the same sentence.

The letter sat on the kitchen counter under a magnet from a church picnic for three days.

Nobody framed it.

Nobody called Aunt Carol.

Nobody asked what I wanted to study.

They asked Jessica whether she had chosen the bridesmaid dresses.

When I graduated summa cum laude, there was a cake from the grocery store that said, “Congrats Jess & Claire!” in pink icing because Jessica’s baby shower fell on the same weekend.

My name was second on my own graduation cake.

I laughed when I saw it because everyone else was laughing, and because I had learned early that making people uncomfortable with your hurt only made them blame you for bleeding in the wrong room.

It was not that my parents never loved me.

That was the part that made it harder to explain.

They fed me.

They bought me school shoes.

They came to the school plays if Jessica did not have something else that night.

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