At family dinner, I said, “I’m about to give birth.”
My parents sneered. “Call a cab. We’re busy.”
I drove to the ER in agony.
A week later, Mom knocked. “Let me see the baby.”
I replied, “What baby?”
I am 27 years old, a freelance marketer living in Austin, Texas. My husband, Harrison, is 29 and works as a senior software engineer.
We have a good life, a quiet life, mostly because we keep our circle incredibly small. But if there is one thing you need to know about me before I get into the nightmare that tore my entire reality apart, it is this. I grew up as the glass child.
If you are not familiar with the term, it basically means I was the invisible one. I was the sturdy, independent kid who never asked for help, which made it very easy for my parents to focus every single ounce of their energy, money, and affection on my younger sister, Valerie. Valerie is 25, but in my parents’ eyes, she might as well be a fragile, helpless princess who needs a red carpet rolled out for her every time she breathes.
It was a Friday evening in late September. I was heavily pregnant, exactly three weeks away from my due date. My husband Harrison was stuck downtown at his firm.
They were going through a massive server migration, one of those tech emergencies where nobody gets to go home until the screens stop flashing red. So I made the twenty-five-minute drive up to Round Rock by myself to attend a family dinner at my parents’ house. I did not want to go.
Every instinct in my body told me to stay home, order takeout, and rest my swollen ankles. But my mother, Beatatrice, had been calling me relentlessly all week. She insisted that I had to be there because Valerie was bringing her new boyfriend, Dominic, to meet the family for the first time.
Dominic was 32, drove a car that cost more than my college education, and never stopped talking about his tech startup. He was exactly the kind of guy my parents idolized. My father, Gregory, and my mother, Beatatrice, have always been obsessed with appearances.
They lived in a nice suburban house, but they were stretching themselves incredibly thin to keep up the facade of wealth. They saw Valerie as their golden ticket, and Dominic was the jackpot. Walking into that dining room felt like stepping into a theater production where everyone was overacting.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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