“Get out. We believe your sister.”
My father shouted the words so loudly the veins in his neck bulged.
I was fifteen years old, standing barefoot in the front hallway of our house in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. My school backpack was still hanging from one shoulder.
Behind him, my twin sister Serena stood halfway up the stairs, crying dramatically.
Her gold bracelet was missing.
And apparently, that was enough.
There was no proof.
No questions. No search of the house.
Just Serena covering her face and whispering through tears, “It had to be Lily. She was in my room this morning.”
My name is Lily Harper.
Serena and I were identical twins, at least biologically.
But in every other way, we were completely different.
Serena was the polished one. Teachers called her charming. Relatives called her radiant.
She knew how to cry without ruining her mascara.
She knew how to sound wounded without ever sounding guilty.
I was the quiet twin. The serious one. The one people called “difficult” whenever I defended myself.
“I didn’t take it,” I said for what felt like the tenth time.
My mother gripped the edge of the dining table, her knuckles white.
“Then where is it, Lily?”
“I don’t know!”
Serena sobbed from the stairs.
“I saved for months for that bracelet.”
“You also lose everything,” I shot back. “You left your AirPods in the freezer last month.”
“Don’t talk to your sister like that,” my father snapped.
And just like that, the verdict was already decided.
The whole argument had exploded in less than twenty minutes.
I had just come home from debate practice when I found them waiting in the kitchen like a courtroom already in session.
Serena said her bracelet had disappeared.
She said she had seen me near her room.
That was enough for my father.
“Search my room,” I said desperately. “You’ll see I didn’t take it.”
“We already did,” my father replied.
I stared at him.
“What?”
“Your mother checked while I picked Serena up from dance.”
That hurt more than the shouting.
They had searched my room before I even came home.
For one stupid second, I looked at my mother hoping she would stop everything.
Instead she said quietly, “If you tell the truth now, we can still work through it.”
Something inside me cracked.
“There is no truth to tell!” I yelled.
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