They took my card while I was asleep and burned through a fortune before dawn. Three days later, they returned sun-kissed, wrapped in designer brands, and thanked me for the getaway—never realizing they’d used the single card in my purse built to destroy lives.
My father’s house resembled a luxury magazine spread—white stone floors, glass walls, fresh lilies on every surface, and a silence so polished it felt expensive. To outsiders, it was the home of a successful man who had rebuilt himself after divorce and found happiness with a glamorous second wife. To me, it was a stage set for cruelty.
My father, Henry, married Vanessa when I was twenty. She was beautiful in a sharp, deliberate way—every smile calculated, every compliment edged like a blade. She came with two daughters, Chloe and Madison, both younger than me, both raised to believe admiration and money were owed to them equally.
To them, I was a permanent inconvenience.
Too quiet, too plain, too serious. They mocked my work clothes, my car, the fact that I didn’t date wealthy men, the fact that I preferred books to parties. Vanessa called me “practical” in public and “pathetic” in private. Chloe treated cruelty like wit. Madison treated entitlement like charm.
My father did what he always did.
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