My sister’s palm print flared crimson across my cheek as I sat alone in my car, blood soaking into my collar. Thirty-two years of being invisible to them hardened into a blinding fury. My phone screen glowed with the lawyer’s number while Grandma’s will lay open beside me. My heartbeat thundered in my ears. They wanted my inheritance? I gripped the property deed, a bitter smile pushing through my tears. Blood ties break without a sound.The imprint of my sister’s hand still stung my face when I locked my car doors and noticed blood marking the collar of my cream blouse.I sat in the parking lot outside my grandmother’s attorney’s office, shaking so violently I could barely keep hold of my phone. The reading of the will had ended less than ten minutes earlier. My younger sister, Madison, had rushed at me near my car, shouting that I had stolen her future, and struck me hard enough to split the inside of my lip against my teeth. Then she hissed, “You think you won? I’ll take everything Grandma meant for me.”
That was the instant thirty-two years of being second place in my own family finally sharpened into something cold and precise.My name is Claire Bennett. I’m thirty-two, a high school counselor, and until that afternoon I had spent most of my life trying to earn love from people who had already decided I existed to make Madison’s life easier. Madison was the golden child, the one my mother labeled “sensitive” whenever she lied, spent recklessly, or lashed out. I was the dependable one. The one who drove to appointments, paid deposits, answered late-night calls, and was called selfish the first time I refused.Only my grandmother, Eleanor Hayes, ever saw the truth without softening it.She had been the one constant in my life. When my mother dismissed my college plans as “too expensive,” Grandma helped me apply for scholarships. When Madison totaled her second car and my mother demanded I co-sign a loan, Grandma told me quietly, “Do not set yourself on fire to keep people warm who enjoy watching you burn.”