My name is Meredith Campbell, and I still remember the exact moment my family’s faces changed. I was standing in a fountain at the Fairmont Copley Plaza Hotel, water pouring off my ruined emerald dress, mascara cutting dark rivers down my cheeks. My own father had just shoved me backward into it in front of two hundred wedding guests.
And as I pushed myself upright, soaking wet and trembling, the laughter swelling around me like a wave, I looked at him and said four words. “Remember this moment.”
He had no idea what was coming. Growing up in the Campbell family meant one thing above all else: appearances.
Our five-bedroom colonial in Beacon Hill looked exactly right from the outside. Polished, successful, the kind of home that made other parents point and say, “That’s what we’re working toward.”
Behind those perfectly painted doors was a different story. From the time I was old enough to understand comparison, I was losing.
My sister Allison was two years younger and somehow always the star. “Why can’t you be more like your sister?” wasn’t something my parents said occasionally. It was the background noise of my entire childhood, playing on a loop I couldn’t turn off.
My father Robert was a prominent corporate attorney who cared about image the way other people care about breathing. My mother Patricia had been a beauty queen who’d traded her crown for a socialite’s life and never stopped performing. Between the two of them, Allison had an audience that never stopped applauding.
I brought home straight A’s. Allison brought home straight A’s plus extracurriculars. I placed second in a regional science competition.
That same weekend, my parents drove across town for Allison’s dance recital and spent the drive back talking about her footwork. During my sixteenth birthday dinner, my father raised his glass. I felt that childish anticipation I could never quite kill, that small, stubborn hope that this time would be different.
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