Her Father Mocked Her Dress, Then Her Two Stars Silenced the Room – eirian

“Go change. You look cheap,” my father laughed after my mother ruined my dress.

I came back wearing a general’s uniform.

The room went dead silent.

My father’s smile cracked before anyone else understood why.

He stared at my shoulders, at the two silver stars catching the chandelier light, and for the first time in my life, Victor Ross looked afraid of something I had become without his permission.

“Wait…” he whispered.

“Are those two stars?”

That was not how the night began.

It began with polished marble floors, white tablecloths, silver chargers, and my mother inspecting me like a flaw in the center of an expensive painting.

The Ross Family Military Foundation Gala was supposed to be my father’s favorite night of the year.

He liked the uniforms.

He liked the donors.

He liked the retired officers who still called him Lieutenant Colonel Ross even though he had been retired long enough for the title to become more costume than command.

Most of all, he liked being seen.

Victor Ross had spent my childhood teaching us that reputation mattered more than almost anything.

He corrected posture at breakfast.

He corrected tone at dinner.

He corrected grief if it sounded too messy in public.

My mother, Elaine, learned his rules and sharpened them.

Kevin, my older brother, learned the easier lesson.

If you mocked first, nobody would ask what you had failed to become.

I was the quiet one.

That was what they called me when they wanted to sound kind.

Quiet meant manageable.

Quiet meant useful.

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