She Planned A $14,000 Italy Trip. Then Her Family Cut Her Out-myhoa

“Make sure you don’t show up at the airport tomorrow,” my mother said.

She said it after dinner, in the warm yellow light of her dining room, with coffee cups still sitting near the plates and a half-eaten tiramisu on the table.

The house smelled like baked pasta, garlic, and the expensive candle she lit whenever she wanted an ordinary night to feel more important than it was.

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At first, I thought I had misunderstood her.

My mother, Linda, had a way of making cruel things sound tidy.

She folded her hands in front of her, smoothed one thumb over the other, and looked at me as if she were about to remind me to water the plants.

“It’s a family vacation,” she said. “Not charity.”

Across the table, my father stared down at his coffee.

My brother Ryan leaned back in his chair with his phone in his hand, wearing the kind of careless expression he had worn most of his life.

He had always been the easy one.

He was the son who got second chances before he even had to ask.

I was the daughter who handled things.

I handled holiday reservations when Mom wanted everyone together but refused to call anyone herself.

I handled Dad’s insurance portal when he “couldn’t remember the password.”

I handled Ryan’s birthday dinner when he forgot to book a table and somehow the problem became mine.

And for the past five months, I had handled Italy.

Two weeks.

Rome, Florence, Venice, and Lake Como.

Four business-class seats because Dad said his back could not survive coach.

Hotels with elevators, views, breakfast included, and “not too touristy” locations because Mom wanted the trip to feel authentic but comfortable.

Train tickets that lined up with private transfers.

Museum passes.

A vineyard tour outside Florence.

A cooking class in Rome.

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