Her Family Excluded Her From Thanksgiving—Then The CEO Saw Her Badge-myhoa

Thora Mitchell did not expect her mother to sound so calm when she ruined Thanksgiving.

That was the part that stayed with her after the phone call ended.

Not the words, though those were bad enough.

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Not even the reason, though that was the kind of insult that crawled under the skin and stayed there.

It was the way Patricia Mitchell delivered it, with the cool patience of a woman who had already practiced the sentence in a mirror and decided her oldest daughter would probably take it.

Thora had been sitting at the kitchen table in her Somerville apartment, grading essays beneath the yellow light over the stove.

A half-empty mug of coffee had gone cold beside her laptop.

Outside, traffic moved through wet streets with that soft shushing sound that always made the apartment feel smaller.

She saw her mother’s name on the phone and thought, for one hopeful second, that Patricia might be asking about Thanksgiving sides.

Maybe rolls.

Maybe pie.

Maybe, for once, something normal.

Instead, Patricia said, “Vivien is bringing Derek to dinner.”

Thora smiled automatically, even though no one could see it.

“That’s nice.”

Then her mother paused.

It was not a natural pause.

It was the kind of pause a person leaves before pushing a knife in gently.

“She thinks it might be better if you weren’t there this year.”

Thora’s pen stopped moving over a student’s paper.

The apartment did not get quieter, exactly, but every ordinary sound seemed to pull back.

The radiator clicked.

The refrigerator hummed.

Somewhere outside, a car horn gave one short impatient blast.

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