At Easter dinner, my dad said, “Your kids can eat when you get home,” tossing them napkins while my sister boxed $72 pasta for her boys. Her husband laughed, “Feed them first next time.” They expected me to pay the $400 bill like I always do. I stood up, called the waiter, and said three words that permanently shattered my family…
Chapter 1: The Easter Feast The atmosphere inside Marone was suffocatingly pretentious. It was the kind of five-star, velvet-draped Italian restaurant where the air always smelled faintly of white truffles, aged oak, and old arrogance. The lighting was deliberately dim, designed to cast a flattering golden glow over the city’s elite. The maître d’ knew my…
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