He didn’t even bother checking. Instead, he smirked and said, loudly enough for his cousin Derek—who was at the table finishing leftovers—to hear, “From now on, buy your own food. Stop living off me.”
The room fell silent.
I stared at him, waiting for the familiar grin, the quick “I’m kidding” he always used when he wanted to dodge responsibility. It never came.
“Excuse me?” I said.
“You heard me,” he replied, folding his arms. “I’m done paying for everything while you act like this house is some all-you-can-eat buffet.”
Derek lowered his eyes to his plate. Heat rushed to my face, but something inside me went strangely cold. Not angry. Not yet. Just clear.
I nodded once. “Okay.”
Ryan blinked, almost surprised I wasn’t crying. “Okay?”
“Yes,” I said. “From now on, I’ll buy my own food.”
For the next three weeks, I kept that promise. I bought my own groceries, labeled them, cooked only for myself, and said nothing when Ryan grabbed takeout or protein bars. Then he casually announced he was hosting his birthday dinner at our house for twenty relatives.
And I smiled, because by that point, I already had a plan.
Ryan’s birthday landed on a Saturday, and he treated it like a national holiday. By Wednesday he had started a group text with his parents, siblings, cousins, and a few family friends who never missed an opportunity for free food. I overheard him boasting from the living room.
“Emily’s making her roast, the mac and cheese, those honey-glazed carrots, the whole thing,” he said. “You know how she does it.”
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