I became everything my little sister had the day our parents died. I stepped into every role she needed, and let go of everything else without thinking twice. Keeping her safe was the only thing that mattered. So when I got a call from her school after some kids destroyed the jacket I had worked weeks to afford, I thought that was the worst part. I had no idea what I was about to walk into.
My alarm goes off at 5:30 every morning. Before I’m even fully awake, I head straight to the fridge.
Not because I’m hungry, but because I need to figure out how to stretch what we have. What Robin gets for breakfast. What I can pack into her lunch. What I can save for dinner.
Robin is twelve. She doesn’t know I usually skip lunch. And I plan to keep it that way.
Because I’m not just her older brother anymore. I’m all she’s got.
I work closing shifts at the hardware store four nights a week. On weekends, I take whatever extra jobs I can find. Yard work, moving furniture, fixing things. Anything that brings in a little more money.
While I’m working, Robin stays with our neighbor, Ms. Brandy, until I get home.
I’m twenty-one. I should be in college, figuring out my own life like everyone else my age. But that can wait. Robin can’t.
For a while, things were steady. Not easy, but manageable. She was doing okay in school, smiling more, settling into something that felt like normal again.
But every now and then, I noticed small things.
A pause when I asked about her day.
A quick change of subject.
A look she couldn’t quite hide.
Like there was something she wasn’t telling me.
It started a few weeks ago, the way she always brings things up when she doesn’t want to make it sound serious.
Casual. Light. Like it didn’t matter much.
But I knew my sister.
And I knew something wasn’t right.