Then my mother texted.
Vanessa says you’re being difficult. It’s Christmas week. Don’t start the new year with bitterness.
I saved that too.
My father sent nothing.
He rarely did. Dad preferred to let my mother do the emotional work and Vanessa do the cutting. Then he would step in at the end with a grave voice and say, “Let’s be reasonable,” which always meant, “Give them what they want.”
On Friday, Mom invited me to brunch.
Not asked.
Invited in the royal sense.
Family brunch Sunday. Wear something nice. Vanessa wants to show us the cruise itinerary.
I stared at the message for a long time.
Martin had told me not to attend any family gathering before the announcement.
But Martin did not understand something.
I did not need to tell them.
I needed to see them one last time before the money changed their faces.
So I went.
The restaurant was the kind my mother liked: white tablecloths, polished glasses, servers who spoke softly enough to make the prices seem elegant. Vanessa arrived late in a camel coat, oversized sunglasses pushed into her hair, waving as if the restaurant had been waiting for her entrance.
“Ellie,” she said, air-kissing near my cheek. “You look tired.”
“You look expensive.”
She smiled. “That’s the goal.”
Mom beamed at her. Dad stood to pull out her chair.
No one pulled out mine.
I sat, folded my napkin in my lap, and watched.
Vanessa spent twenty-two minutes describing the cruise suite. Private balcony. Champagne service. Amalfi Coast. Mykonos. Rome. She said “Mediterranean” at least six times, each time glancing at me to see if envy had landed.
It hadn’t.
Something else had.
Distance.
A clean, cold distance.
The kind I used at work when reviewing bank records for fraud. You cannot analyze clearly while hoping the numbers love you.
“So, Ellie,” Mom said finally, turning toward me as if remembering a side dish. “Any plans for New Year’s?”
“Some.”
Vanessa laughed. “That sounds mysterious. What, are you reorganizing spreadsheets?”
“In a way.”
Dad sipped his coffee. “You could learn from your sister. Life isn’t only work.”
“No,” I said. “Sometimes it’s also comped champagne.”
Vanessa’s eyes narrowed.
Mom cleared her throat. “Don’t be sharp. Vanessa knows how to receive blessings. You always act like everything is an insult.”
I looked at her.
“Was the ticket not meant as an insult?”
Silence.
A small one.
But real.
Dad sighed. “Eleanor.”
There it was.
My full name, spoken like a warning.
“It was a lighthearted gift,” Mom said.
“You called it two dollars of hope.”
Vanessa smirked. “Well, wasn’t it?”
I looked at her for a long moment.
“Yes,” I said softly. “It was.”
Something in my tone made her blink.
Mom missed it.
She was already reaching into her purse.
“Speaking of money,” she said, “Vanessa told me you refused to help her with a little shopping advance. I know you’re careful, sweetheart, but family doesn’t nickel-and-dime family.”
I almost smiled.
A little shopping advance.
Five thousand dollars.
For a woman holding a thirteen-thousand-dollar cruise package bought by the same parents who had handed me a scratch-off ticket.
“I’m not giving Vanessa money.”
Vanessa put her fork down.
“Wow.”
Mom’s face hardened. “You don’t have to say it like that.”
“How should I say it?”
“With kindness,” Dad said.
I turned to him. “Was it kind when you called Vanessa an investment?”
His jaw tightened.
“That was a joke.”
“No. It was a thesis statement.”
Vanessa rolled her eyes. “This is why nobody enjoys being around you. You turn everything into some courtroom drama.”
I leaned back.
Courtroom drama.
If only she knew.
Mom put a hand over Vanessa’s. “Your sister has always been sensitive.”
That sentence had followed me my whole life.
Sensitive when I cried.
Sensitive when I noticed.
Sensitive when I remembered.
Sensitive when the truth made them uncomfortable.
“No,” I said. “I’ve always been observant.”
Mom’s lips parted.
Dad’s voice dropped. “Enough.”
And for the first time, that word did not make me shrink.
I placed cash on the table for my tea.
Not my meal. I had not eaten.
“I have work to do.”
Vanessa laughed. “On a Sunday?”
“Yes.”
“What could possibly be that important?”
I looked at all three of them.
My mother, who loved me most when I was useful.
My father, who respected confidence more than character.
My sister, who had mistaken being favored for being better.
“You’ll find out soon enough,” I said.
Then I walked out.
The press release went live Monday at 9:00 a.m.
By 9:07, my phone had twelve missed calls.
By 9:19, thirty-eight.
By 10:02, seventy-nine.
Most from Vanessa.
Some from Mom.
Three from Dad.
That was how I knew fear had entered the room.
Dad only called when a situation could no longer be managed by women.
I sat in Martin’s office watching the screen while the lottery announcement spread across news sites.
Local Woman Claims $100 Million Jackpot Through Hawthorne Trust.
My photo was not in the first wave. That was intentional. But the details were enough. The store location. The date. Christmas ticket. Hawthorne.
Vanessa figured it out quickly.
Her first voicemail was confusion.
“Ellie? Call me. Is this some kind of joke?”
The second was excitement.
“Oh my God. Oh my God. It’s you, isn’t it? You little liar. You won and didn’t tell us?”
The third was anger.
“You let me ask you for five thousand when you had a hundred million dollars? What is wrong with you?”
The fourth was strategy.
“Listen, delete my last message. I was shocked. Obviously we need to talk as a family. Mom is crying.”
The fifth was pure Vanessa.
“Half that ticket is ours, you know. Mom bought it.”
I played that one for Martin.
He wrote something down.
“Predictable,” he said.
“Is she right?”
“No. A completed gift transfers ownership. They gave it to you. Publicly. On video. Before the draw was known.”
“Scratch-off.”
“Before the value was known,” he corrected. “Same principle.”
My mother’s voicemail came next.
“Eleanor, sweetheart, why would you hide something this important from your family? We are not strangers. We raised you. We loved you. We deserve to hear this from you before the entire state hears it. Call me immediately.”
She sounded wounded.
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