My Parents Stole My Savings For My Sister And Triggered My Trap-eirian

The candle was the first thing I noticed after they left.

It had burned itself into a crooked little stump beside the cake knife.

I stood in my kitchen with the bank folder open on the table and stared at that candle longer than I stared at the withdrawal confirmation.

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Maybe that sounds strange.

But money, even stolen money, can be counted.

A birthday you spend watching your parents celebrate robbing you leaves a different kind of mark.

My father had walked into my apartment without knocking.

My mother had followed him with her purse tucked under her arm, looking around my home as if she were checking whether I had anything else worth taking.

They did not say happy birthday.

They did not ask why the cake was small.

They did not notice that I had set out three plates, because some foolish part of me still believed surprise visits could become kindness if I stayed quiet enough.

Then my father dropped the folder on my table.

The number at the bottom of the first page was almost too neat to feel real.

Two million nine hundred thousand dollars.

Ten years of extra hours, freelance nights, old coats, skipped vacations, and small grocery lists had been emptied in one signature.

My mother’s face did not soften when I looked up.

She told me Grace needed a real future.

That was how she said it.

A real future.

As if mine had been a storage room.

My father smiled the way he smiled after winning arguments nobody else knew were happening.

He said my savings had secured my sister’s future.

I kept my hands folded because I did not trust them open.

I had spent most of my life learning that reaction was expensive.

When I was seventeen, my father took the money I had saved from a part-time job and called it borrowing.

Grace wore a new dress that weekend.

When I passed my first data security exam, my father asked if that meant I could fix his passwords faster.

When I got promoted, my mother gave me a stack of household bills and said family helped without making a scene.

Every time they took, they called it sharing.

Every time I hurt, they called it attitude.

Grace was not cruel in the loud way my parents were.

She was worse in a softer way.

She benefited and looked away.

She accepted the piano lessons, the internships, the parties, the introductions, and the rescues.

I accepted overtime.

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