MY OWN MOTHER SCREAMED AT ME TO LEAVE THE FAMILY BARBECUE FOR WEARING MY DRESS BLUES
The rain hammered the roof of my truck like somebody was throwing gravel by the handful, but I barely heard it. I just kept replaying my mother’s voice—sharp, final, cutting through the music and the chatter and the smell of burning hamburgers. Don’t you dare come back until you apologize to your sister. I had nodded once,…
