On Christmas night, my father shouted, “You need to apologize to your brother right now! If not, GET OUT!” My brother smirked and leaned close to my ear. “Who do you think they’ll believe?” I didn’t argue. I quietly packed my things and left the house that was no longer a home. Until 8 a.m. the next morning. My brother’s phone slipped from his hand and hit the floor. A voice from Stanford echoed through the speaker. My mother burst into tears. My father began to tremble. I simply smiled and said, “This Christmas… the truth speaks.”

On Christmas night, my father shouted, “You need to apologize to your brother right now! If not, GET OUT!” My brother smirked and leaned close to my ear. “Who do you think they’ll believe?” I didn’t argue. I quietly packed my things and left the house that was no longer a home. Until 8 a.m. the next morning. My brother’s phone slipped from his hand and hit the floor. A voice from Stanford echoed through the speaker. My mother burst into tears. My father began to tremble. I simply smiled and said, “This Christmas… the truth speaks.”

Christmas Eve should have smelled like pine and cinnamon, but in our house it tasted like bitterness. The argument had started small—something about a missing research file—but it escalated with terrifying speed. My father’s voice cut through the living room, sharp and absolute. “You apologize to your brother right now,” he shouted, pointing at me as if I were a stranger. “If you don’t, get out of this house.” My mother stood behind him, silent, her eyes fixed on the floor. Kevin, my older brother, leaned against the staircase railing, arms crossed, wearing the familiar smile of someone who already knew the ending.

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