When our mother passed away and our father retreated into grief, life changed overnight. I was twenty-two, and my little sister Lily was only ten. No one officially asked me to raise her, but the responsibility became mine all the same. I learned to stretch every paycheck, manage a household, and keep life steady for a child who had already lost too much. I packed lunches, signed school papers, stayed awake through illnesses, and made sure Lily never doubted she was deeply loved. The years were exhausting, but I never saw them as a burden. She was my sister, and protecting her simply became the shape of my life.
Sixteen years later, I sat at her wedding watching her walk down the aisle with tears in my eyes, overwhelmed by how far she had come. The venue glowed with warm lights, the room buzzed with celebration, and for a while everything felt perfect. Then during the reception, Ethan’s father, Richard, stood to give a toast. What began as polite congratulations slowly turned uncomfortable. He praised Lily for “overcoming difficult beginnings” and spoke in a tone that suggested her past had been something embarrassing she had managed to rise above. He never said my name, but his meaning was clear: he viewed our humble upbringing as something lesser, and by extension, he dismissed the life we had built together.