At Thanksgiving, my father lifted his glass and said, “We all agreed. No gifts this Christmas.”
He said it with that heavy, final tone he used whenever he wanted the room to understand that discussion was over. The dining room smelled like roasted turkey, canned cranberry sauce, and my mother’s cinnamon candles burning too close to the centerpiece. My sister Renee sat across from me with her hands folded under her chin, nodding as if Dad had just announced something wise and noble.
“Money’s tight for everyone,” Dad added.
My mother, Patricia, dabbed at the corner of her eye with her napkin. Not because she was crying. Because she liked moments that made her look fragile and selfless. “Christmas isn’t about things anyway,” she said. “It’s about family.”
Renee’s husband, Derek, squeezed Renee’s shoulder. Their two boys were in the living room shouting at a video game, completely unconcerned with the financial austerity supposedly descending over the family. Renee gave me a sad little smile, the kind people give when they already know the ending and want to enjoy watching you catch up.
I believed them.
That’s the part that still embarrasses me, even now.
I believed them because I wanted to. Because after years of being the daughter who made things easy, who never asked for much, who helped quietly and swallowed disappointment like medicine, I still thought there was some invisible line my family wouldn’t cross.