The drive to Willow Creek Estates took six hours through rural highways and farmland that gradually gave way to manicured subdivisions and gleaming commercial districts. I left before sunrise from the farmhouse where I grew up, the same house where my parents had raised me and my younger sister Vivien before they passed five years ago. My truck rumbled through the pre-dawn darkness while I tried to convince myself that showing up for Vivien’s wedding was the right thing to do, despite everything that had happened between us over the years.
My name is Camilla Brooks, I’m thirty-six years old, and I run the Brooks Cooperative—a collection of small farms and growers that my father built from nothing and that I’ve spent the last decade protecting and expanding. It’s honest work, the kind that leaves dirt under your fingernails and teaches you that worth isn’t measured in appearances but in effort and integrity. Vivien had spent years trying to forget that lesson, and I was about to discover just how far she’d gone to erase where we came from.
The venue appeared on the hillside like something out of a luxury magazine—iron gates gleaming in morning light, perfectly trimmed ivy covering stone walls, fountains that looked like they belonged in European palaces. I slowed my truck as I approached the entrance, already feeling out of place among the expensive cars gliding past. Two attendants stood near the valet circle, checking clipboards with mechanical efficiency.
As I pulled up, one of them glanced at my truck, then motioned to someone behind him. A security guard stepped forward with the practiced certainty of someone who already knew the outcome of this interaction. He asked for my name, and when I gave it, he nodded once as if everything had just clicked into place.
Then he reached under his arm and pulled out a laminated sheet. My photo stared back at me—the same picture taken at a harvest dinner years ago, me smiling without effort or pretense. A thick red line slashed through it diagonally, and beneath the photo, four words in bold black letters: “Do not let her in.”
The world stopped.
The murmur of arriving guests didn’t fade—it sharpened. Every sound felt like it was being directed at me even though no one else could see what I was seeing. The guard looked almost apologetic, but apologies don’t soften the impact of being literally crossed out of your own sister’s life with a printed sheet of paper.
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