Aunt Donna, calm as glass: “Linda, nobody is ganging up on you. But what Pauline just read—that’s not how you talk about your own daughter.”
Mom pivoted. Gaslight. Second weapon.
“Jessica is being dramatic. She’s always been the sensitive one. One vacation and suddenly the whole family is against me.”
Derek—Derek, who hadn’t spoken up for me once in four years—unmuted himself.
“Mom, she’s not being dramatic.”
His voice was halting, like a man unlearning silence in real time.
“She asked us to take turns three years ago. We all said no. I said nothing. That’s on me.”
Mom stared at his square on the screen.
Then she turned to Uncle Ray. Social pressure—her last play.
“Ray, you’re her uncle. Tell her she’s wrong. Tell her family comes first.”
Uncle Ray didn’t blink.
“Family does come first, Linda. That includes Jessica. And from what I’m hearing, she hasn’t come first in a long time.”
That’s when Mom started crying.
But even through the tears, even through the shaking, I noticed what she did next. She turned her camera toward the living room where five children sat on the carpet surrounded by wrapping paper.
“Look at them,” she said. “They’re confused. They don’t understand what’s happening. This is what Jessica did to them.”
From somewhere behind the camera, Karen’s voice—tired, raw, done.
“Mom, stop. Jessica didn’t do this. We did.”
The screen flickered. Karen had moved. And my mother sat alone in the frame, crying into the silence of her own making.
I hadn’t said a word during any of it. I’d watched from my little square on the screen, the ocean behind me, the wind in my hair, fifteen faces staring at a truth that had been sitting in plain sight for years.
I hadn’t needed to say anything. The messages said it. Pauline said it. Even Karen said it.
But now the call had gone quiet, and every rectangle on that screen was looking at me, waiting.
So I spoke.
“Mom, I love you. I love this family.”
I kept my voice level—not angry, not shaking, just clear.
“But I spent four Christmases being your babysitter. I paid $180 for Noah’s urgent care visit that no one reimbursed. I slept on an air mattress in the kids’ room. I canceled plans, skipped holidays with friends, and worked extra shifts all year so I could afford one vacation. And you announced I’d be watching the kids without ever asking me.”
I paused. The wind caught my hair. The waves were there behind me—steady and indifferent.
“You said I don’t have a real life.”
I looked straight at the camera.
“But I do. It’s just that none of you ever thought to look.”
Nobody spoke.
“I’m not angry,” I said. “I’m just done being the person who gives up her life so everyone else can enjoy theirs. If you want me at Christmas next year, I’ll be there as family—not as staff.”
The silence held for a long time.
Then, from her small square in the corner, Pauline: “Well said, sweetheart.”
Mom’s voice, when it finally came, was small. Smaller than I’d ever heard it.
“I didn’t know you felt that way.”
And I said the only thing left to say.
“You didn’t ask.”
Uncle Ray was the one who wrapped it up.
“I think we all have some thinking to do,” he said—the kind of sentence a man says when he knows the room needs an exit and nobody else will build one.
One by one, the squares said their goodbyes. Quiet ones. Aunt Donna waved. The cousins from Roanoke murmured, “Merry Christmas!” and clicked off fast. Derek gave a small nod before his screen went dark. Karen didn’t say anything. She just looked at the camera for a second, then reached forward and ended the call. Mom turned off her camera without a word.
I sat on the porch for a long time after the screen went black. The sun was dropping toward the waterline, turning the sky the color of copper and apricot. Somewhere down the block, someone was grilling. The smell of charcoal drifted up with the salt air.
Megan came out with two mugs—chamomile tea, because she knows I don’t like coffee afternoon. She sat in the chair next to mine and didn’t ask how it went. She’d heard most of it through the screen door.
I waited for the guilt to hit—that familiar voice, the one that had whispered for four years: You should have just gone. It would have been easier.
But it didn’t come.
Instead, I felt something I hadn’t felt in years.
Space. Room to breathe—like I’d been holding my breath for four Christmases and finally, slowly, completely exhaled.
At 7:00 p.m., a text from Karen.
“Jess, I’m sorry about the candle comment and the allergy list and all of it. I should have said thank you. I should have said it years ago.”
I didn’t reply. Not yet. I needed time.
At 7:30, Pauline: “Merry Christmas, sweetheart. I’m proud of you.”
I typed back: “Merry Christmas, Aunt Pauline. Thank you for telling the truth.”
Then I put the phone away and listened to the ocean until the sky went dark.
Megan and I flew back on the 27th. The Outer Banks airport was small and half empty, and we boarded a regional jet that smelled like recycled air and peanuts. I slept the whole way. First unbroken sleep I’d had in days.
When I got back to my apartment, everything was exactly as I’d left it—quiet, clean. The lamp on the nightstand still on from when I’d left in the dark four days earlier.
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