Her Family Chose Her Sister. Then She Opened Two Envelopes-aurelia

Amelia knew something was wrong before anyone spoke.

The house was too quiet for a Sunday visit.

Her parents’ living room usually had some kind of noise moving through it, even if it was only her mother complaining from the kitchen or her father arguing with the television.

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That afternoon, the quiet sat heavy on the furniture.

It smelled like pot roast, furniture polish, and the lemon cleaner her mother used when she wanted the house to look better than the people inside it felt.

David was standing by the window.

Emily was sitting in the armchair.

Her parents were side by side on the couch.

Nobody looked surprised to see Amelia, which meant they had all been waiting.

That was the first thing that made her stomach tighten.

The second was the chair.

It had been placed in the center of the room, slightly away from everyone else, facing the couch like a witness stand.

Amelia had spent most of her life in that house learning how to read furniture.

Where people sat told her who had already been believed.

Where people stood told her who still had power.

That afternoon, there was only one empty seat.

Hers.

Her father lifted his chin toward it and said, “Daughter, sit down. We need to talk.”

He had always used that tone when he wanted obedience to sound like concern.

Amelia looked at him, then at her mother, then at Emily’s too-bright face.

She sat.

The navy dress brushed over her knees as she smoothed it down with one hand.

David had bought her that dress for their anniversary.

He had said the color made her look calm.

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