The son. The baby. The family’s permanent unfinished project. Kyle is in his thirties now and still carries himself with the soft entitlement of a boy who has never had to sustain consequences long enough for them to teach him anything useful. In homes like ours, sons are treated not as people to be formed but as assets to be protected from discomfort. If Kyle loses a job, the boss was threatened by him. If he misses rent, the landlord is predatory. If he gets pulled over, the officer had an attitude. My mother narrates failure as persecution so consistently that I’m not sure he has ever once looked squarely at his own patterns.

And then there was me.

Skyla.

My job was to absorb the static.

I was the one who remembered what needed doing before it became visible enough to be praised.

I was the one who packed the extra napkins, refilled the water glasses, picked relatives up from airports before dawn, stayed late to clean after holidays, lent money that would never return, wrote resumes for cousins, fixed printers, drove people home, listened to tearful rants, smoothed things over, made myself useful in rooms where love was measured through service.

If that sounds noble, it wasn’t.