“Sammie… What did you do?”
“Clover, what are you —”
“I know about the letters and the threats. And the lawyers. You tried to take me from the only parent I had left.”
“But—”
“Michael didn’t owe me anything,” I continued. “But he gave me everything. He wasn’t given the right to be my dad — he earned it. I don’t understand why you’re here. Did you think my father would have left something for you? He left the truth.”
Aunt Sammie looked away.
“Did you think my father would have left something for you?”
***
That night, I opened the box labeled “Clover’s Art Projects” and pulled out the macaroni bracelet I made in second grade. The string was frayed, the glue brittle, but the flecks of yellow paint still clung to the edges.
I ran my finger over the beads, remembering how proud Michael had looked when I gave it to him. He’d worn it all day — even to the grocery store — acting like it was made of real gold.
I slipped it onto my wrist. It barely fit, the elastic digging slightly into my skin.
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