I always knew my parents loved my younger sister, Lily, more than me. From the moment she was born, she was the golden child — the one whose curls Mom said were “like spun honey” and whose smile Dad swore “could win over the whole world.”
Meanwhile, I was always given lines like:
“You’re the smart one, Emily.”
“You’ll figure it out, girly.”
“We need to save for Lily and her college — she’s going to need our help.”
Mom said that last one so often it felt like a prayer she repeated to make it sound less cruel. Even as a little girl, I understood: Lily’s future was bright and worth sacrificing for.
Mine? I was expected to build it myself. If I wanted something, I had to work for it.
And so I did. Even at sixteen, with all the rules about where I could work, I found ways to earn my own money. I babysat for the Thompsons down the street, a family who left me sticky notes with long lists of snacks their kids were allowed.
I stayed late most nights because they “forgot the time.”
On weekends I worked at the little café on Main Street, serving coffee to bleary-eyed regulars who tipped in coins instead of bills. I even mowed lawns and pulled weeds for neighbors who still paid in crumpled cash. Every single dollar went into a yellow envelope tucked deep inside my desk drawer.
That envelope wasn’t just money. It was proof. Proof that I could build something for myself, by myself — even if nobody believed in me the way they believed in Lily.
After a year of hustling, last month I sat cross-legged on my bedroom floor counting the money. My hands shook as I reached the final number: $2,500. I could hardly breathe.
It was the most money I’d ever had. For the first time in my life, it felt like my future was in my hands. That night at dinner, I couldn’t keep my excitement to myself.
“I finally saved enough to put in the bank,” I said, smiling as I cut into my cheesy baked potato. “I can open a proper account now. Dad, can you help me, please?
I have $2,500.”
Dad looked up from his plate and gave me a small nod. “That’s nice, Emily. Good for you, my girl.
Well done,” he said. The words should have made me glow, but they landed flat, like an automatic response. “Isn’t that great?” I asked, looking to my mom, hoping for more support — maybe even some pride.
She smiled at me, but it was that thin, polite smile she used when she was pretending to care. “Yes, honey, that’s very nice,” my mother said before immediately turning back to Lily. “So, Lily, how was your day at school?”
I sat there waiting for the pride that never came.
When it didn’t, I told myself I’d be proud enough for all of us. Two days later, I went to check on my envelope. The space in my drawer was bare.
For a moment, I convinced myself I’d misplaced it — maybe in my excitement I’d tucked it into a notebook or left it folded inside a textbook. But the longer I searched, the more panic rose in my throat. I tore through my room, yanking open drawers, dumping out their contents onto the floor, shaking notebooks by their spines.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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