She Found Her Forged Signature, Then Her Family Came Begging-galacy

“Your brother owes three hundred and thirty thousand dollars. You’re paying it,” my father said.

He said it across my parents’ dining table with the same voice he used for ordinary family instructions, like he was telling me to bring ice or move my car from the driveway.

The overhead light buzzed above us.

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The roast on the sideboard had gone gray around the edges.

A folder sat in front of me, thick with papers that smelled like printer toner, dust, and fear.

Caleb stood behind Dad with his arms crossed.

My brother was pale, sweaty, and still somehow smug.

That was the part that made my stomach turn first.

Caleb always looked calm right after a disaster because disaster had never been trained to land on him first.

It landed on me.

It had landed on me since we were kids.

When Caleb broke the neighbor’s window with a baseball, I was the one Dad sent over with apology cookies.

When Caleb wrecked Mom’s car at nineteen, I was the one who helped her call the insurance company because Caleb “couldn’t handle Dad right now.”

When Caleb started and abandoned one business idea after another, everyone in the family called him ambitious.

When I worked overtime, saved carefully, and paid my own bills, they called me lucky.

Luck, in my family, meant being useful enough to exploit and quiet enough not to embarrass anyone.

Dad tapped the folder with two fingers.

“Read it.”

So I did.

The first page was a loan statement.

The second was a past-due notice.

The third mentioned a lien warning tied to Caleb’s construction business.

The fourth made my mouth go dry.

It was a personal guarantee that listed my parents’ house as collateral.

Mom sat beside Dad, twisting a paper napkin until the corner started to tear.

“Your father and I could lose everything,” she said.

Her voice had the wobble I knew too well.

It was the voice she used when she wanted me to stop asking questions and start fixing things.

I kept reading.

Underneath the lien warning was a business credit line application.

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