The Screenshot on Page Three Proved My Sister Didn’t Crash My Car by Mistake-yumihong

The room smelled like baked cheese, garlic, and tomato sauce cooked a little too long. A fork clicked once against a plate and stopped.

Paper whispered over the coffee table as I slid the page forward.nnAmber’s nail, still chipped from the crash, dug into her knee hard enough to whiten the skin. My father leaned in so fast his glasses slipped down his nose.

My mother reached first.nnNobody had read a full sentence yet, but the room had already changed shape.nn—nnWhen Amber was ten, she split her chin open on the sidewalk two houses down from ours. I was fourteen.

I took off my hoodie, pressed it to her face, and walked her home while she cried blood into the sleeves.nnMy mother told that story for years like it proved what a good brother I was. What she never said was what happened after.nnI got praised for being reliable.

Amber got excused for being reckless.nnThat was our family’s quiet division of labor.nnI was the one who remembered appointments, drove to stores before storms, stayed home when pipes burst, learned how to compare insurance quotes, and kept spare batteries in a drawer nobody else restocked.nnAmber was the one who was always in the middle of some fragile season. A bad breakup.

A confusing boss. A dream she had not finished chasing.

An anxiety spiral that somehow arrived right when consequences did.nnMy parents did not call it favoritism. They called it compassion.nnBut compassion only flowed one way in our house.nnWhen I got my first used Honda in college, Dad told me to keep it clean because no one respects what is always available.

When Amber dented it borrowing it for a concert she never told me about, he said I should be grateful she made it home safe.nnThat was the first time I understood the rule. What belonged to me could become communal the moment Amber wanted it.nnStill, there were years when I thought adulthood might fix it.nnWhen I bought the Audi, Amber came down to the parking garage with me.

She ran her fingers over the slate-gray paint and laughed at how careful I was opening the driver’s door.nnThen she sat in the passenger seat, inhaled that cold leather smell, and said, “Wow. You finally bought something no one can touch.”nnAt the time, it sounded like admiration.nnMuch later, it sounded like measurement.nn—nnThe call from the Evanston officer came at 1:07 p.m.

I remember because I was still at my desk, a container of reheated pasta open beside my keyboard, when an unfamiliar number lit up my phone.nnHe asked if I owned a slate-gray Audi A4.nnBy 1:52, I was staring at the front end folded around a light pole that had done nothing except stand there. The hood looked peeled back.

One headlight hung like a broken tooth. Blue and red lights rolled across the windshield in slow waves.nnAmber stood on the curb with glass dust in her hair and her coat half-buttoned.

Her friends were gathered behind her, close enough to be loyal, far enough to avoid blame.nnThe car smelled like hot metal, deployed airbags, and something sour underneath it all.nnSpilled alcohol.nnThe officer kept his voice neutral. The car had entered the turn too fast.

There were passengers. An open container had been found inside.

A citation had been issued.nnAmber did not apologize first.nnShe looked at the wreck, then at me, and said, “It was an accident.”nnWhen I kept staring, she added, “That’s what insurance is for.”nnThe sentence landed harder than the crash scene. Not because it was cold, but because it was familiar.nnIn the rideshare back to Chicago, she sat beside me and scrolled her phone.

Around Wilmette, she finally said the line that turned a bad day into a final one.nn”Mom and Dad will smooth this out. They always do.”nnThe worst part was that she was not guessing.nnThat night, my parents proved her right in under four minutes.nnDad called it a mistake.

Mom called me materialistic. Amber cried into a blanket on their couch while the police citation sat face down on the coffee table like something indecent.nnI could have shouted.

I could have read every line of the report out loud. I could have asked my mother why lying only seemed unforgivable when it came from me.nnI did none of that.nnI walked out with my jaw locked so hard my teeth hurt.nnAt 2:13 a.m., my phone buzzed with a text from a number I did not know.nnIt was one of Amber’s friends.nn—nnHer name was Tessa.

She sent one message first.nnI’m sorry. You deserved the truth.nnThen came a video.nnAmber was in a restaurant booth in Evanston, laughing with her head thrown back, my Audi keys looped around one finger.

A silver can sat by her elbow. The camera shifted.

Somebody said, “Didn’t your brother say no passengers?”nnAmber lifted the keys and smirked.nn”He says a lot of things,” she said. “Mom can get him over it.”nnAfter that came screenshots from their group chat.nnAt 10:11 that morning, one friend had asked if Highland Park was really that far for an interview.nnAmber replied, “No interview.

Just needed the car.”nnAt 10:13, another friend asked what she would tell me.nnAmber wrote, “Same thing I told him. Career thing.

He eats rules for breakfast.”nnAt 10:14, she added the line that ended whatever was left of my doubt.nn”If anything goes wrong, stick to Highland Park. Mom will handle Darien.”nnThere was one more screenshot.

It came after the crash.nn”Delete the brunch pics,” Amber had written. “And do NOT mention the can.”nnPage three was not going to be a bill.

Page three was going to be Amber in her own words.nnThat was the deeper wound. The car had not only been wrecked.

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