She Was Burned at Christmas Dinner, Then Her Phone Changed Everything-aurelia

The roast hit the kitchen floor so hard it sounded like a gunshot.

For one strange second, I heard only that.

Not the Christmas music coming from Patricia’s speaker.

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Not Frank laughing in the dining room.

Not Vanessa breathing behind me.

Just the crack of the pan, the scrape of metal, and then the terrible splash of oil hitting my legs.

Heat moved faster than thought.

It soaked through my dress and wrapped around my thighs and shins like fire.

I screamed so hard the sound tore at my throat.

The kitchen smelled like rosemary, garlic, scorched meat, hot oil, and the sugary vanilla candles Patricia had lit across every flat surface before dinner.

She loved a perfect picture.

That was the thing about Daniel’s mother.

She could make a house look warm without letting a single warm thing happen inside it.

The cabinets were white.

The counters were polished.

The Christmas towels hung straight on the oven handle.

Through the front window, the little American flag on her porch shifted under the Christmas lights while the whole neighborhood probably saw the house and thought a happy family lived there.

Inside, I was on the floor.

And no one came.

I had been trying to take the heavy Christmas roast out of the oven with both hands.

Patricia had hovered all afternoon, checking the potatoes, sighing at the green beans, making small comments about how Daniel used to love Christmas before he got married.

Before me, she meant.

She did not always say it.

She did not need to.

Vanessa did.

Vanessa had made a hobby of saying the quiet parts out loud.

She called me charity work once in Patricia’s laundry room while I was folding napkins for Easter brunch.

She called me temporary at Frank’s birthday dinner while everyone pretended not to hear.

She told me Daniel would come back to his real family eventually, as if I were a wrong turn he had taken on the way home.

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