The smell of roasting thyme and sage should have been a comfort. It should have meant family, warmth, and the familiar sleepy joy of a Thanksgiving afternoon in Los Angeles.
Instead, it pressed against my chest like an invisible wall, separating me from the laughter floating out of the dining room.
I stood at the threshold, fingers aching from the weight of the two canvas bags cutting into my shoulders. In one bag, two homemade pumpkin pies, their crusts crimped by my own aging hands at five in the morning.
In the other, a bottle of Napa Cabernet I had saved for nearly a year, refusing every previous temptation to open it, whispering to myself:
“Thanksgiving at Jessica’s.
I’ll bring it then.
It’ll be special.”
It was my first Thanksgiving at my daughter’s new house in Los Angeles—a sprawling two-story colonial-style home in a gated community outside the city, all manicured lawns and leased SUVs.
I’d never been invited to see it before, not once in the eighteen months they’d lived there.
I only knew it from the internet: filtered photos on Instagram, the girls in matching dresses on the front lawn, Mark grinning at a grill he hadn’t paid for under fairy lights bought with my card.
Then, three days ago, the text had arrived.
No call.
No warmth.
No “how are you, Mom?”
Just a cold, sterile message:
“Mom, come over on the 28th at 1. Family dinner.”
I stared at the screen for a full minute.
My thumb hovered over the keyboard.
There were so many things I wanted to say.
I settled on a single red heart emoji.
Pathetic, maybe.
But it was the only way I knew how to say: “I’m still here. I still want us.”
She never replied.
It didn’t matter, I told myself as I stood in her entryway, the smell of turkey and butter wrapping around me.
I was here.
That was what counted.
I was in her house.
I was invited.
Maybe this was the moment things would turn around.
I had rung the bell ten minutes earlier. Mark had opened the door, a glass of whiskey already in his hand and a smile that looked like it had been stapled onto his face.
“Come on in, Eleanor,” he’d said, leaning forward, giving me a dry, papery kiss that barely brushed my cheek.
“You’re right on time.”
Right on time.
As if I were a plumber.
A booking. A service call.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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