At My Brother’s Wedding, The Forged Trust Made My Father Go Pale-thuyhien

The cupcake was waiting on the cold marble counter when Ashley Vance came home from work, and the first thing she noticed was not the frosting but the scraped place where another man’s name had been removed.

It was her twenty-fourth birthday, though nobody in the house had said those words to her all morning.

The cupcake leaned against a paper napkin beside the sink, dry at the edges, with the ghost of the name Greg still visible under the sugar.

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Her phone buzzed before she could decide whether to laugh or cry.

The notification opened to Ryan’s live stream, where her brother was behind the wheel of a restored vintage Mustang, screaming like a boy on Christmas morning while their parents clapped from the driveway.

His birthday was not until Tuesday, but Ryan never had to wait for anything if David and Susan could buy applause early.

Ashley stood alone in the kitchen with a stale cupcake in one hand and her phone in the other, watching her brother rev a car that cost more than any help her parents had ever offered her.

The silence around her stopped feeling peaceful and started feeling locked.

She ate the cupcake because she was hungry, and because some old trained part of her still believed accepting crumbs was better than admitting nobody had set a place for her.

The sugar scraped the roof of her mouth while Ryan shouted through the phone speaker, and Ashley thought about every holiday when she had cleaned wrapping paper while he played with gifts.

She thought about graduations where her parents forgot a cake for her but remembered champagne for him.

She thought about the architecture program she had entered with loans in her name, three jobs on her schedule, and guilt in her chest because her father had sworn the family could not help.

When the cupcake was gone, she washed her hands, walked upstairs, and pulled the red notebook from the bottom drawer of her bedroom desk.

The notebook had once been full of sketches, clean lines and steel beams and impossible windows that caught light exactly the way Ashley wanted a room to catch it.

Over the past year, the drawings had been crowded out by numbers.

There were catering receipts David had promised to repay, Ryan’s emergency rent that Susan had called temporary, and business expenses Ashley had organized because nobody else could find a file without shouting her name.

She turned to a clean page and wrote the date.

Then she wrote stale cupcake, zero, and Ryan’s Mustang, forty-five thousand.

The math looked obscene in black ink.

For years, Ashley had called herself the responsible one because that sounded kinder than unpaid employee.

She had planned anniversaries, typed Ryan’s college essays, tracked David’s chaotic receipts, soothed Susan’s panic before every party, and told herself usefulness was a language of love.

That afternoon, the page told her a different truth.

They were not misunderstanding her value.

They were spending it.

Susan’s text arrived before the ink had dried, asking where Ashley was because the caterers for Ryan’s welcome dinner needed to be let in.

There was no happy birthday, no question about her day, and no pretend warmth tucked around the demand.

Ashley looked at the message until the screen went black.

She did not answer.

Instead, she sat on the floor beside her bed and remembered the day her acceptance letter came from the architecture program.

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