My mother’s voice cracked like a whip.

Ethan flinched.

Maya stiffened.

I turned.

“No?”

“There are guests,” my mother said. “This is not the time for a scene.”

I looked toward the glowing dining room.

Laughter. Music. The smell of rich food.

And behind me—my wife feeding my son spoiled rice.

I picked up the plate.

“Good,” I said. “Then they can all hear.”

I walked inside.

The room went silent as people noticed me.

A man with dust on his clothes.
A child in his arms.
A plate of rotten food in his hand.

I set it down on the table.

“This,” I said, “is what my wife and son were eating behind this house… while you were being served this.”

Silence.

My mother tried to smile it off.

“Maya insisted on staying back there—”

I walked to Maya, took her hand, and brought her forward.

“Sit.”

She hesitated.

I pulled the chair out myself.

Then I looked at her.

“When did they move you out?”

Claire snapped, “Don’t drag strangers into this.”

I ignored her.

“Maya.”

She looked at me. Then at them.

Then back at me.

“Three months after you left,” she whispered.

The room tightened.

I felt something break inside me.

“Did you have a phone?”

“At first.”

“What happened?”