My Cousin Mocked Me as Poor. One Phone Call Put His Mansion at Risk-Nyra

“Here comes the family beggar. Hide your wallets,” my aunt Carolina said the moment I walked through her front door.

She said it brightly, like she was greeting me with a joke instead of a knife.

The house smelled like roast beef, cinnamon candles, expensive perfume, and that faint lemon-polish scent people use when they want guests to believe nothing in their lives has ever been messy.

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Warm chandelier light slid across the entryway floor.

Glasses clinked from the dining room.

Someone laughed before I even took off my coat.

It was Tyler, of course.

My cousin was leaning near the bar with a whiskey in one hand, one ankle crossed over the other, his silver watch catching the light every time he moved.

He laughed like my aunt had just delivered the best line of the evening.

Not politely.

Not awkwardly.

Loudly.

The kind of laugh that tells you a person has never had to pay for the way he talks to people.

I stood there with an apple pie in my hands.

It was still warm through the foil pan, and the cinnamon smell came up through the little gaps in the crust.

I had baked it because my uncle River once told me quietly that he missed my mother’s pies.

I had not baked it for Carolina.

I had not baked it for Tyler.

And I definitely had not baked it so a room full of relatives could treat it like evidence against me.

But that was the role they had given me years earlier.

Lauren, the unsuccessful niece.

Lauren, the divorced woman who had started over.

Lauren, the one who did not show off vacations, watches, new cars, or designer bags.

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Lauren, the one who lived quietly enough that everyone assumed quiet meant broke.

In that family, privacy was suspicious.

If you had money, you were supposed to display it.

If you did not display it, Carolina decided you must not have any.

Carolina had been like that as long as I could remember.

When I was a teenager, she made comments about my mother’s grocery coupons.

When I was twenty-three, she asked me in front of everyone whether my first apartment had “real furniture yet.”

When my marriage ended, she hugged me with one arm and said, “Well, at least now you know what kind of lifestyle you can actually maintain.”

She had always known exactly where to press.

Tyler had learned from the best.

He had her light eyes, her smile, and her instinct for turning another person’s embarrassment into a party trick.

I walked into the kitchen and set the pie on the counter beside Carolina’s imported china.

The plates were stacked in neat shining rows, each one looking too delicate to be eaten from by anyone who owned a dishwasher.

A little place card sat near the serving platters with my name written in thin gold letters.

It had been put at the far end of the table.

That made me smile, though not for the reason Carolina would have liked.

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