A Holiday Flight Home Became A Debt Trap In Her Parents’ House-Lian

Jasmine Sterling should have known better than to trust a holiday invitation that arrived wrapped in apologies.

Her mother had called from the old house on the hill with a voice soft enough to make Jasmine’s chest ache.

“I want us to start over,” Eleanor had said.

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There had been a pause after that, the kind of pause people leave when they expect forgiveness to walk into it.

Jasmine had been in London then, standing in the narrow kitchen of her flat with a mug of coffee going cold in her hand, watching rain blur the window above the sink.

She had built a life across an ocean because distance was the only thing her family had ever respected.

Still, it was December.

Still, her mother had sounded tired.

Still, some small and embarrassing part of Jasmine wanted to believe there was a version of home that did not come with a bill.

So she accepted the ticket.

At the airport, Eleanor was waiting outside the sliding doors in a white coat with a fur-trimmed hood, lipstick perfect, hair smooth, arms already open.

“Jazzy!” she called.

The blast of cold air cut through Jasmine’s coat, and then came the smell of her mother’s perfume, citrus and powder and money spent where tenderness should have been.

Jasmine let herself be hugged.

For three seconds, she was not a forensic auditor who had crossed an ocean with questions in her carry-on.

She was eight years old again, running into her mother’s arms after a sleepover, hoping the house would be quiet when they got home.

Eleanor touched her face and smiled too brightly.

“London agrees with you,” she said. “You look so grown up.”

“You look the same,” Jasmine answered.

It was almost true.

Her mother still looked polished, but age had sharpened the corners of her beauty, and bitterness had carved thin lines around her mouth.

On the drive home, the town looked like it had been staged for a Christmas movie with a budget too large and a heart too small.

Designer shops glowed behind frosted glass.

Restaurants were full of people laughing over wine.

Snow moved sideways through the headlights, soft and violent at once.

Eleanor drove a new black SUV with heated seats and a screen bright enough to light both their faces.

That mattered.

Three weeks earlier, she had called Jasmine crying about money.

“How’s work?” Eleanor asked.

“Busy,” Jasmine said. “We just wrapped a pharmaceutical fraud case.”

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