Dad Tried To Make Me Pay My Brother’s Forged Loan At My Door-thuyhien

The folder arrived before the accusation did.

Dad slid it across my parents’ dining table with two fingers, careful not to wrinkle the tablecloth Mom saved for Sundays.

The house smelled like roast chicken, overboiled green beans, and the lemon cleaner Mom used whenever she wanted a room to feel more peaceful than it was.

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Caleb stood behind his chair instead of sitting, which told me he had already been warned not to speak first.

My brother had a construction company, a pickup with custom rims, and a talent for making disasters sound like weather.

I had a quiet apartment, a steady job in payroll, and the kind of savings account nobody mentioned until they wanted it.

Dad tapped the folder.

“Your brother owes 330,000,” he said.

I thought I had misheard him.

The number sat in the air like a dropped plate that had not shattered yet.

“Excuse me?”

“You’re paying it,” Dad said.

He used the same voice he had used when I was fourteen and asked why Caleb got a car for passing math while I got told good grades were expected.

Mom sat at the end of the table twisting a paper napkin until the corner split.

“Claire,” she whispered, “please just read it.”

So I opened the folder.

The first pages were letters from a lender, polite at the top and ugly by the bottom.

There were past-due notices, a warning about default, and a statement showing Caleb’s business credit line had been stretched until it snapped.

Then I found the application.

My name was typed under guarantor.

My old address was listed.

My employer was listed.

At the bottom, someone had written my signature in a careful copy of the one I used on birthday cards and family checks.

I stared at it so long the paper blurred.

The kitchen did not explode.

It shrank.

The fridge hummed.

Rain tapped the back window.

Caleb shifted his weight once, and the rubber sole of his shoe squeaked against the tile.

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