I Let Them Throw Me Out Before They Learned Whose Black Card My Sister Had Stolen-yumihong

The driveway smelled like hot rubber, spilled coffee, and brand-new leather.

The Range Rover’s engine kept ticking as it cooled, a small metallic sound under my father’s low whistle and my mother’s breathless laugh.

Mia stood beside the matte-black hood with one hand on her hip and the black titanium card pinched between two polished fingers. She looked like a woman posing inside the life she had always believed she deserved.

At the edge of the curb, two neighbors had already slowed their evening walk. They were pretending not to stare.

That was the part my family understood best. An audience.

The basement had not started as an exile.

When I was twenty-four, my father’s hardware store collapsed under debt, a state tax bill, and one bad winter that kept customers out for weeks. I moved home because somebody had to be practical.

Mia cried for three days when our parents told her they could not keep paying for photo shoots, beauty courses, and the little emergencies that always seemed to follow her around. I took the basement because it had a door, and because saying less was easier than saying what I thought.

Back then, my father still called me his steady one. My mother still pressed leftovers into containers for me before bed. Mia still wandered downstairs in fuzzy socks to steal my hoodies and ask me to edit the captions under her selfies.

There had even been one Christmas, years earlier, when the power went out in the whole neighborhood. We sat on the living room floor under blankets and ate store-bought cookies by flashlight. Mia leaned against my shoulder and whispered, almost sleepily, “If I ever get famous, I’m taking you with me.”

For a long time, that memory hurt in a simple way.

Later, it hurt differently.

Because Mia had always loved being carried more than she had ever loved me.

At sixteen, she used my debit card to buy a $380 pair of boots online and called it an accident. At nineteen, she borrowed my car and brought it back with a cracked taillight and somebody else’s vape under the seat. At twenty-two, she cried in my room until I rewrote an internship application after she had missed the deadline herself.

Every time, I cleaned it up.

Every time, my mother said, “She’s young.”

Every time, my father said, “Don’t make everything ugly.”

That was the family pattern. Mia wanted. I fixed. My parents translated that arrangement into love because love was the prettier word.

By the time I started working for Victor Sterling, I had already been doing crisis management for half my life.

The first crack should have registered sooner. Mia had started coming downstairs without knocking. She would stand in my doorway, scanning the room the way some people scan a store window, as if my life contained products she had not tested yet.

Two weeks before the car, she picked up the black card from my desk, turned it in the light, and asked, “Whose is this?”

I took it from her hand and said, “Something you should never touch.”

She laughed.

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