She Bought a Lake House for Herself. Then Her Family Finally Called-myhoa

The cake cost eighteen dollars and came in a white box with a little plastic window on top.

Quinn carried it into her Chicago apartment like it was something fragile enough to embarrass her.

The rain had followed her home in a thin, cold mist, dotting her coat sleeves and making the paper grocery bag sag against her wrist.

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Inside the bag were candles, a cheap bottle of wine, and the kind of frozen dinner she bought when she was too tired to cook but too stubborn to order delivery.

She was thirty-two years old.

She told herself that mattered in the practical way, not the sentimental way.

Thirty-two meant rent paid on time.

Thirty-two meant managing clients who used phrases like “brand crisis” and “market repositioning” as if the world might end because a logo was the wrong shade of blue.

Thirty-two meant she did not need her parents to sing over a cake.

Still, she put the cake on the coffee table with one candle in the center.

The wick caught on the second try.

The flame shook gently in the draft from the window.

That was when she opened Facebook.

She did not open it looking for pain.

She opened it for noise.

There were coworker photos, a neighbor complaining about parking, somebody’s baby in a pumpkin hat months out of season, and then her father’s post appeared like a slap laid neatly on glass.

Her family was seated around a white tablecloth at a restaurant Quinn recognized immediately.

Miles was in the middle, grinning like the evening had been built for him.

Jessica leaned into his shoulder.

Her mother had both hands around a champagne flute.

Behind them hung a banner that said, “Congratulations on Your Promotion, Miles!”

The time stamp said four hours earlier.

On Quinn’s birthday.

Her father had written, “So proud of our superstar. The Edwards legacy continues.”

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