She Was Sent To The Kids’ Table, Then The $4,386 Bill Came To Her-myhoa

By the time I walked into the private dining room at Rosewood Grill, the party already sounded complete without me.

That was the first little sting of the night.

Not the worst one.

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Just the first.

The room smelled like steak, perfume, butter, and expensive wine.

Silverware clicked against white plates, someone laughed too loudly near the windows, and the warm light from the chandeliers made every glass on the table look cleaner than anything in my apartment ever did.

I had come straight from work.

My black slacks were wrinkled behind the knees.

My flats hurt.

My clinic badge was still in my purse because I had been too tired to take it off in the parking lot.

The wall clock above the bar said 7:06 p.m.

Six minutes late.

In my family, six minutes was enough for a trial.

My cousin Emily stood near the windows with her left hand lifted in that delicate way newly engaged women do when they are pretending not to show the ring.

Her fiancé, Brandon, stood beside her accepting handshakes from every uncle who owned a boat, wanted a boat, or talked like owning a boat made him wiser about marriage.

Aunt Diane kept touching Emily’s shoulder and saying, “I’m just so happy for you,” in a voice that somehow sounded like she wanted credit.

Then my mother saw me.

Carol Miller did not need to raise her voice to make a room shrink around you.

She had a special kind of smile for public correction.

Soft at the edges.

Sharp underneath.

“There you are, Sophie,” she said.

Every conversation near her softened.

“You’re late.”

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