My stepmom left me everything — and gave my siblings $1 each. They said I didn’t deserve it because I wasn’t her real child, and hadn’t even known she was dying. But when I found a letter hidden behind her wardrobe, I realized the truth about our family was worse than I imagined.
“According to Sarah’s will, the house and the $100k bank account go to Melissa,” the lawyer announced calmly.
“The rest of you will each receive $1.”
An uncomfortable silence filled the room.
Then my half-brother, Daniel, snapped, “Why does she get everything?”
“We were the ones with Mom in the final days of her life,” Ava said.
“Melissa didn’t even know she was sick,” Jenna added.
I sat there, stunned. I didn’t understand it either.
I wasn’t Susan’s real daughter, so why did she choose me?
The answer didn’t come in that office. It started years earlier, in small moments that I had trained myself not to think about too hard.
When I was four, my dad married Sarah.
I loved her almost right away, but when Daniel was born two years later, something shifted in the house.
He called her “Mom” before he could pronounce half his words right.
Ava copied him.
Jenna copied Ava.
I tried once, but the word came out awkward and too loud. I can still feel the heat in my face.
Sarah looked at me across the kitchen.
For half a second, I thought she might come closer. I thought she might say it back with her eyes.
Daniel laughed at me.
“She’s not your mom!”
I looked at Sarah, waiting for her to say something to him. Instead, she turned back to the stove and carried on stirring the soup.
That was the first time I understood there was a line in our house.
And I was standing on the wrong side of it.
After Dad died, that line in the house turned into a wall.
He had a stroke so sudden it felt fake at first.
One day, he was mowing the lawn and yelling at Daniel to move his car, and the next, he was in a hospital bed.
After the funeral, Daniel became louder, Ava and Jenna became sharper, and Sarah became even more controlled than before, which I would not have thought possible.
My half-siblings stayed close to Sarah after Dad died. I did not.
Not because I didn’t want to — because I didn’t know how.
Every conversation felt like knocking on a locked door and pretending I had not heard the bolt slide into place.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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