My Sister Humiliated My Daughter at Easter. Then Her Buyout Collapsed.-eirian

Easter dinner at my parents’ house had always been less of a meal than an audition.

Everyone had a role.

My mother arranged the table like a magazine editor might stop by with a camera.

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My father poured wine and waited for someone to praise his taste.

My sister, Chloe, performed success.

And I, Maya, was expected to perform gratitude for being included.

That was how it had been for years.

Chloe was the bright one, according to my parents.

She was the ambitious one.

She was the daughter with the crimson lipstick, the glossy hair, the confident laugh, and the ability to make cruelty sound like branding.

I was the quiet one.

The practical one.

The one who left early, paid her own bills, raised her daughter, and never bothered correcting the family story that I was struggling.

At some point, silence becomes a costume other people pick for you.

If you wear it long enough, they begin to think it is your skin.

My daughter Sophie was five that spring.

She had soft cheeks, serious eyes, and a habit of concentrating so hard when she painted that the tip of her tongue poked out between her lips.

She believed handmade things mattered.

She believed adults meant what they said.

She believed family was a place where people were supposed to be careful with your heart.

That Easter week, she decided she wanted to make something for Auntie Chloe.

Chloe had been talking for months about her skincare company.

At every dinner, every holiday, every phone call my mother forced me into, Chloe found a way to mention her luxury brand.

She said luxury like it was a moral category.

She said acquisition like a priest says blessing.

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