“Yeah.” I reached for his hand. My palm was damp. “Let’s go.”

For a beat, no one spoke. Then my dad finally looked up, turkey knife paused midair. “Lucy, come on. We just sat down.”

I didn’t look at him. “Luke,” I repeated. “Hoodie.”

Caroline let out that sharp, familiar laugh—the one I’d heard since we were kids whenever she made me the punchline.

“You’re seriously walking out over turkey?”

I tightened my grip on Luke’s hand. “We’re walking out because I don’t let anyone talk to my son like that.”

Luke’s chair scraped as he stood. He didn’t look at anyone. He kept his eyes on our joined hands, like that was the only solid thing left in the room.

We passed the buffet table, passed the framed family photos—Luke appeared in only one, half cut off at the edge. The smell of roasted turkey and cinnamon candles chased us down the hallway. No one stopped us.

When I opened the front door, November air hit my face like a slap I actually needed. I stepped onto the porch with my son and breathed in the cold.

Behind us, laughter restarted—nervous, relieved laughter—like now that we were gone, everything could return to normal.