My younger brother texted in the group: “don’t come to the weekend barbecue. my new wife says you’ll make the whole party stink.” my parents spammed likes. i just replied: “understood.” the next morning, when my brother and his wife walked into my office and saw me… she screamed, because…

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My little brother dropped the message into the family group chat on a Friday night while I was still at my desk, blue light from two monitors reflecting off the glass walls of my office. Don’t come to the BBQ this weekend. My new wife says you’ll stink up the whole party.

No emojis.

No ha-ha.

Just that.

A second later he followed it with: Her words, not mine. On my phone screen, the bubbles stacked up under a picture my mom had sent earlier that day of their backyard in Durham: folding tables, red-and-white checkered tablecloths, my dad’s old charcoal grill in the corner, and a tiny plastic American flag jammed into a potted plant on the patio.

The same flag magnet has been on their fridge since I was a kid, sun-faded and chipped around the edges.

In our family, you don’t talk about anything real, but you always make sure the flag is straight. Mom reacted to Gage’s text with a laughing emoji, then a string of red hearts.

Dad hit it with a thumbs-up like my humiliation was a recipe they’d just approved.

A cousin added a crying-laugh face.

I stared at the screen. My thumb hovered over the keyboard.

I could have written a paragraph. I could have sent a voice memo, the kind that starts calm and ends with the truth spilling out like gasoline.

Instead, I typed one word.

Understood.

I hit send, set the phone down next to my iced tea, and leaned back in my leather chair. Outside my office window, the Friday night skyline of Raleigh glowed hazy and warm, Memorial Day flags snapping on the tops of downtown buildings in the late May breeze.

My name is Palmer Whitlock.

I’m thirty-five years old, Executive Vice President of Engineering at Nexara Biolabs, the company that’s about to launch a medical device projected to pull in high nine figures within three years. My family thinks I “do something in a lab.” They picture goggles and test tubes and me clocking out at five to drive back to some one-bedroom apartment where I microwave leftover takeout and cry into my cat.

They still think Gage is the golden child and I’m the weird, intense older sister who chose a career over a life.

I flipped my phone face down and slid it away from the neat stack of contracts in front of me—contracts worth more than my parents’ entire street put together.

When people tell me I’m not wanted, I don’t beg.

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