My Sister Called Me Selfish Until My Report Exposed Everything-kieutrinh

The report stayed closed in my lap while my sister turned Mom’s dining room into a courtroom.

The pot roast smell had settled into the curtains.

The chandelier made every iced tea glass shine too brightly.

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Somewhere near the kitchen sink, the old wall clock kept ticking like it had been hired to count down the last few minutes of the family I thought I still had.

Christina stood at the end of Mom’s oak table with both palms pressed flat against the wood.

“You never support this family,” she said. “While we struggle, you sit in Austin acting like you’re better than us.”

The room went quiet in that heavy family way, the kind where everyone has already chosen the person they want to blame.

Mom looked down at the rosary wrapped around her fingers.

Aunt Rosa folded her napkin twice and stared at her plate.

Uncle Miguel leaned back in his chair like he was waiting for me to prove Christina right.

Derek, Christina’s husband, never looked up.

That was the first thing I noticed.

He kept his eyes on his food.

Christina kept going because silence had always worked for her.

“We’re barely holding things together,” she said, and her voice shook just enough to sound wounded. “Derek takes every job he can find. The kids need things. Bills don’t stop. And Elena sends maybe a couple hundred here and there when she feels like it.”

A couple hundred here and there.

My fingers tightened around the manila folder under the table.

Inside were transfer records, confirmation numbers, highlighted screenshots, account summaries, and a forensic accountant report prepared by Patricia Wong.

One hundred forty-seven pages.

Bound with a black clip.

Separated by section.

Cleaner than any speech I could have given.

Christina had no idea.

Not yet.

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