Her Family Stole Her Apartment. Then Her Fiancé Saw the Evidence-eirian

Luna Pierce bought the apartment because she wanted one place in the world that no one could make her feel guilty for entering.

It was a downtown Seattle unit with clean windows, polished counters, and a view that made the city look almost gentle when the evening lights came on.

She had signed for it after years of saving, overtime, careful budgeting, and a kind of discipline her family had always praised only when they needed something from her.

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The apartment cost $450,000.

That number mattered because Luna had earned every dollar attached to it.

It was not inherited money.

It was not a gift.

It was not a family asset wearing her name for convenience.

It was hers.

For most of her life, that word had felt dangerous.

Hers meant selfish.

Hers meant ungrateful.

Hers meant she had forgotten where she came from.

In the Pierce family, Chloe needed and Luna provided.

That was the arrangement no one wrote down because everyone benefited from pretending it was love.

Chloe was four years younger, prettier in the way relatives commented on at barbecues, and skilled at turning helplessness into a room-wide emergency.

Helen treated Chloe’s tears like weather warnings.

Richard treated Luna’s tears like disrespect.

When Chloe forgot homework, Helen drove it to school.

When Luna forgot a permission slip in seventh grade, Richard told her missing the field trip would teach her accountability.

When Chloe barely finished high school, the family rented a tent, ordered catered food, and sent her to Hawaii as a reward for perseverance.

When Luna graduated magna cum laude from the University of Washington with a degree in data science, her family did not come.

Helen texted an hour before the ceremony and said she had a migraine.

Richard could not leave her alone.

Chloe had plans she could not cancel.

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