“I just want dinner with a few friends,” I said carefully. “I can even pay for it myself.”
“Absolutely not,” my father, Gregory, said from the doorway.
He had appeared without me noticing.
“Do you have any idea how that would make your sister feel,” he added, his voice firm. “She is struggling with her confidence, and watching you celebrate would upset her.”
“It is my eighteenth birthday,” I said.
“And she is your sister,” my mother snapped. “Family comes first. You are becoming an adult, so act like one and think about others.”
The logic made no sense.
Brittany finally looked up, pretending to feel bad. “I am sorry, Avery. I just feel invisible sometimes, and if you celebrate, it will make it worse.”
My mother hugged her. “See how mature she is,” she said.
I walked away without another word.
That night, I lay in bed thinking. I had saved nearly four thousand dollars from working for two years, and I had already earned a full scholarship to a state university that covered tuition and housing. By midnight, I had made my decision.