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The Night I Flipped the Dinner Table and Shattered My Family Novel Cover

The Night I Flipped the Dinner Table and Shattered My Family

Growing up as the middle child, the protagonist believed she was her mother's favorite. While her siblings received expensive gifts and treats from their father and grandmother, her mother provided humble, handmade alternatives. The illusion of a loving family finally shatters during a New Year’s Eve dinner when the girl is offered a mere chicken wing while her siblings feast on drumsticks. Refusing to accept the scraps of affection any longer, she flips the table in a final act of defiance.
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Chapter 4

“Eggs that were two weeks past their expiration date,” I said, enunciating each word. “This is what you ‘specially’ used to make it for me.”

“So what if they were a few days expired!”

My father suddenly roared.

His face had turned livid, clearly enraged by the string of revelations, trying to drown everything out with sheer volume.

“It’s not like it’ll kill you! Who doesn’t eat expired food once in a while? You think you’re so precious!”

I turned and looked at him calmly.

“Dad, last week when Henry said he wanted soft-boiled eggs, why did you drive all the way to the supermarket to buy the most expensive free-range eggs?”

My father seemed to have his throat suddenly clamped shut. His mouth hung open, but he couldn’t produce a single word in response.

He instinctively glanced at my brother, who was staring wide-eyed, as if he too remembered that box of fragrant farm eggs.

I stopped looking at him and swiped my finger across my phone screen.

“I know words alone mean nothing.”

I opened an order record on a shopping app. “This is something I bought—food spoilage test strips.”

I took a small sealed packet from my pocket and tore it open in front of everyone.

Under the stunned gazes of the room, I slid the thin strip deep into the grayish sponge cake.

The white tip of the strip changed color at a visible speed, turning a dark, nearly ink-black shade.

“I-it turned black!”

“Th-this… can you still eat that?”

“Two weeks expired? My god…”

I held up the completely blackened strip, letting it stand like a small flag exposing the ugly truth.

“You couldn’t bear to throw expired away, so you made this for me to eat?”

I looked at my mother. Her body had already begun to tremble slightly. “And this is what you called something you ‘made specially for me.’”

“B-But you ate them!”

My mother seemed driven into a corner.

Her voice rose sharply, almost hysterical, with the reckless desperation of someone who had nothing left to lose.

“You had two pieces yesterday, didn’t you? And nothing happened! Aren’t you standing here perfectly fine right now!”

The whole room fell silent again.

Everyone seemed stunned by the shamelessness of her defense.

I looked at her and suddenly felt overwhelmingly tired.

“Yes. I did eat it.” I nodded, my voice unusually calm.

I opened the final photo on my phone and turned the screen toward her and every relative in the room.

It was a medical report.

Diagnosis: Acute gastroenteritis.

Recommended treatment: Hospital observation.

“I ate two pieces,” I said.

“Then I spent two days with severe diarrhea, a fever, and dehydration. I went to a clinic alone. The doctor said it was food poisoning that caused acute gastroenteritis and recommended that I be hospitalized.”

My gaze swept over the clearly printed date on the report. “Yesterday, you and Dad took Henry to the amusement park. You said he deserved a reward for improving his grades on his final exams.”

The room fell into a terrifying silence. Even my brother was so frightened that he stopped sniffling.

My mother and father both looked ashen.

After a long while, my mother finally found her voice.

“I—I did all this for the family. I’ve lived frugally and spent so much money on you, paying for your college…”

“My college tuition was covered by student loans. My living expenses came from the money I earned working part-time,” I interrupted calmly, putting my phone away.

I didn’t give her another chance to spin a new lie. I walked straight to the living room and turned on the large television, casting my phone screen onto it.

“Ladies and gentlemen, this is the transaction history from my bank account.”

I opened the records and scrolled down page after page.

Around the fifteenth of every month, there was always a deposit of four hundred, five hundred, six hundred…