At Thanksgiving Dinner, My Family Protected The Son Who Hit Me-kieutrinh

My brother slammed me into the wall at Thanksgiving, and my dad grabbed me like I was the problem.

The worst part was not the blood.

It was my mother looking away like nothing had happened.

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My name is Carl, I’m 26 years old, and I manage fleet operations for a logistics company.

That sounds cleaner than it feels.

Most days, I’m tracking drivers, rerouting trailers, answering angry calls, checking timestamps, and trying to keep a dozen moving parts from turning into one expensive mess.

A load either arrived or it didn’t.

A trailer either fit the dock or it didn’t.

A driver either logged the stop or he didn’t.

You can’t flatter a delivery schedule into forgiving you.

You can’t smile your way around a missing pallet.

My work runs on reality and receipts, which is probably why my family has always made me feel like I was living in the wrong house.

My parents live in a version of the world where reality is whatever looks best in a photo.

Their driveway is wide enough to make my apartment parking lot feel like a joke.

My dad owns a multimillion-dollar logistics company that sells smart fleet systems to other people who already have more money than they can admit out loud.

He talks about efficiency, growth, leadership, and legacy like those words belong to him personally.

My mother hosts charity events with white flowers, polished tables, and donation cards printed on thick paper.

She calls it impact.

She says it with the same soft voice she uses when she wants people to notice the necklace but not ask what it cost.

And then there is Hunter.

My brother is five years older than me, and he has been the center of the family for as long as I can remember.

He is the face of my father’s company.

He is the one in the photos.

He is the one sitting beside my dad at events.

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