My true story. From California. I visited my millionaire daughter just to say hello.
But when the door opened, I froze. She didn’t expect me to see that. The oranges were still warm from the sun when I picked them.
I had chosen the ripest ones, each round and golden, just like I used to when she was a little girl. Back then, she loved the way I peeled them in a spiral, always saving the last piece for her to eat in one bite. I thought—foolish—that she might still remember, that a part of her somewhere beneath the makeup and magazine covers still had room for her mother.
Her house was massive—ten million dollars of white stone and glass with a gate that buzzed before it opened. I had to walk up the driveway slowly, gripping the bag of oranges, afraid the security camera would flash red and deny me entry. But it did not.
Not that day. I rang the bell. I waited.
And when the door opened, I froze. She looked like a painting. Not my daughter.
Not the girl I raised on food stamps and bedtime stories, but someone else entirely. She wore a white blazer, perfectly tailored. Her lips were painted a shade of crimson that made her look like she had never known hunger.
Her eyes—my eyes—looked at me with a fear so quick it passed in a blink, replaced instantly by something sharper. Contempt. “What are you doing here?” she hissed, her voice low, urgent, panicked.
“Why didn’t you call first? You can’t be here.”
I opened my mouth to answer, but she did not give me the chance. Her tone sliced through me before I could even offer the oranges.
“Are you trying to ruin my career?” she snapped. “Do you know who I’m meeting today? The press is inside.
Investors. People who think I came from nothing. People who believe my mother died when I was six.”
I stared at her.
“What?”
She crossed her arms. “Do not look at me like that. You know what this is.
You’re not part of my story anymore. You’re a liability.”
A liability. That was the word she used.
Not mother, not visitor, not even mistake. A liability. Then she leaned in, her voice trembling—not with sadness, but with rage.
“Do not call me your daughter. I am the product of drive, of ambition. You—” she pointed at me like a stain “—you were a biological accident I clawed my way out of.”
I did not drop the bag.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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