Her Brother Mocked Her At Thanksgiving. Then The ER Nurse Turned-heyily

Thanksgiving at my parents’ house always smelled like turkey skin, cinnamon candles, and wet leaves.

The smell hit me before my mother even opened the door.

It was familiar enough to make my chest ache.

Image

The porch light was already on, even though the sky had not gone fully dark yet, and the front walk was slick with rain that had been falling on and off all afternoon.

My black work shoes squeaked against the mat.

They were not dinner shoes.

They were hospital shoes.

The kind you buy for support, not looks.

My mother opened the door, looked down at them, looked at my coat, and gave me the same little tight smile she had been giving me since I was twelve years old.

“You could’ve dressed nicer,” she said.

I kissed her cheek anyway.

“Happy Thanksgiving, Mom.”

Inside, the house looked exactly the way it always did.

Cream serving bowls on the sideboard.

Football murmuring from the living room TV.

My father’s chair at the head of the dining table, pulled out at the same angle.

A small bowl of cranberry sauce nobody really liked but everybody expected.

Nothing in my parents’ house changed unless it broke beyond repair.

Maybe that was why I never fit there anymore.

My name is Claire Grant, and in my family, I had been assigned a role a long time ago.

I was the nervous one.

The almost one.

The one who got close, then fell short.

At work, I was different.

At work, people did not ask whether I was pretending.

They handed me trauma intake forms at 2:16 a.m., called my name when the monitor screamed, and trusted my hands when the room got too loud.

At home, I was still the girl who cried before piano recitals.

Almost grown.

Almost enough.

Never quite arrived.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *