When my father flicked two cocktail napkins onto the table and said my daughters could eat when we got home, something inside me went very still.
Lily, only six, looked at the napkins like they might somehow turn into food if she stared long enough. Then her eyes dropped quietly to her lap. Emma, nine and already old enough to recognize shame, sat upright beside me, her hands folded too neatly, as if staying perfectly still might make her invisible.
Across the table, my sister Rebecca slid two takeout containers toward her sons without a second thought. Their meals—pasta, chicken, bread—were being boxed up to take home, even as my girls had shared a side salad and fries because I had chosen to wait until payday before ordering more.
“Honestly, Claire, you should’ve fed them before coming,” Rebecca said casually. “Kids get cranky.”
Her husband laughed softly. “Feed them first next time.”http://WECSXCSDS