At dinner, Mom said calmly, “Your sister needs your room.” Dad slammed his hand on the table. “Either agree or get out.” A week later, I didn’t argue — I simply moved into the house across the street. When they saw the “Sold” sign with my name on it, their faces drained of color.

12

I am Allison Carter, 29 years old. And last week, at a family dinner that started like any other, my world was irrevocably turned upside down. My whole life, I’ve been the invisible one, a ghost in the architecture of my own family.

I was the quiet, studious daughter my parents barely noticed next to my sister, Julia—the dazzling, charismatic beauty influencer who could do no wrong in their eyes. They praised her every move, showered her with everything her heart desired, while I was simply… there. An afterthought.

But that night, under the warm glow of the dining room chandelier, they pushed me too far. Growing up in Phoenix, I was always eclipsed by my sister’s shadow. Our family lived in a standard two-story house in a middle-class neighborhood in Scottsdale, the kind of place where manicured lawns abutted one another and everyone knew each other’s business.

In that house, my sister Julia was the undeniable star of the show. She craved attention with a desperate intensity, always posing for photos, practicing her makeup tutorials in the bathroom mirror until the glass was fogged with her breath, and dreaming of the influencer fame she was certain awaited her. My dad, a retail manager at a big-box electronics store, had a knack for indulging her every whim.

My mom, a bank employee who orbited Julia like a devoted satellite, made sure our golden child got whatever she wanted. New clothes for fashion shows she wasn’t invited to, professional photography equipment, even a studio-grade ring light for the videos she filmed in her bedroom. They would clap and cheer as she practiced her spiels, their eyes sparkling as if she were already a world-famous celebrity.

Meanwhile, my younger brother, Kyle, was the baby of the family, coddled and adored. He would run through the house with his arms full of new toys—remote-control drones, the latest gaming consoles, you name it. Mom would scoop him up, cooing about how utterly adorable he was, while Dad slipped him extra cookies before dinner.

In their eyes, Kyle could do no wrong; his every laugh was a treasure. They’d parade him around at family gatherings, showing off his boyish charm, while I sat quietly in a corner, unnoticed. I was different.

I found my solace not in the spotlight, but in the quiet, orderly world of books—thick ones about mathematics, economics, and anything with numbers that made logical sense. I would spend hours in my room scribbling equations or reading about investment strategies, dreaming of a world where I could make my own mark, one calculated decision at a time. But to my parents, my passions were pointless, an eccentric hobby at best.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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