Ethan moved closer to me, pressing against my leg. I rested a hand on his shoulder, and in that moment, something inside me settled. It wasn’t anger anymore. Anger still hoped to be understood. This was clarity.
“Megan,” I said quietly, “you are not getting my signature.”
She crossed her arms. “Fine. Forget the loan.”
“Oh, I will. And while we’re being honest, I’m done being the emergency contact, the backup wallet, the responsible daughter you ignore until your plans fall apart.”
Mom’s eyes narrowed. “You’re overreacting because you’re sick.”
“No. I was underreacting for years because I wanted a family.”
That landed. I saw it.
Megan grabbed her purse. “Come on, Mom. She wants to play victim.”
“Play victim?” Denise snapped. “She has cancer.”
Megan spun around. “You don’t know anything about this family.”
Denise folded her arms. “I know enough.”
Ron muttered, “Let’s go,” but Mom lingered, still holding the note. I realized she was waiting for me to soften, to apologize, to fix what she had broken. I had done that my whole life. Not this time.
“You need to leave,” I said.
Mom looked stunned. “You’re throwing us out?”
“Yes.”