I never told my parents that my grandmother had left me ten million dollars. To them, I was always the “extra” child—the one who lived in the shadow of my perfect sister, Raven.

I never told my parents that my grandmother had left me ten million dollars. To them, I was always the “extra” child—the one who lived in the shadow of my perfect sister, Raven.

I used to believe the hardest part of being the “extra” child was how invisible I’d become.

At dinner, my parents’ attention always drifted past me and settled on Raven—their pride, their straight-A star, the varsity captain they proudly posted about. I was the one forgotten after practice, the one who learned to clap quietly so no one noticed I was clapping alone.

I never told them about Grandma Margaret’s money.

Not because I was hiding it out of greed—but because I’d seen what happened the last time she tried to help me. When she offered to pay for a school trip, Mom called it “inappropriate charity.” Dad laughed and suggested Grandma support Raven instead. After that, Grandma only contacted me privately.

Then the house fire happened.

There were sirens, smoke, heat, Raven screaming. I remember Dad pulling her out first. I remember trying to follow and the hallway disappearing into darkness.

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