She Got a $2 Lottery Ticket. Then $100 Million Exposed Her Family-olive

The lottery ticket was supposed to be small enough to hurt without looking cruel.

My mother did not forget me.

She did something worse.

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She remembered me in a way that let everyone laugh.

Christmas morning in my parents’ living room looked warm if you did not know where to stand.

The tree lights glowed against the windows, cinnamon candles burned on the mantel, and my mother kept telling everyone to move closer so the photos would look natural.

Nothing in that house was natural.

Vanessa sat in the center armchair like the day had been designed around her.

Her hair was curled, her nails were gold, and she had already arranged the empty gift bags around her feet like proof of affection.

I sat near the edge of the couch in a clearance sweater with one loose cuff, trying not to notice that my name had been written on the smallest envelope under the tree.

Dad handed Vanessa her gift last.

That was how my parents honored her.

They created a pause first.

Then they let the room watch her be adored.

She opened the glossy envelope and screamed.

A luxury Mediterranean cruise.

Thirteen thousand dollars.

A suite with a private balcony.

Premium excursions.

A printed itinerary that looked more carefully prepared than anything my parents had ever given me.

My mother cried when Vanessa hugged her.

Dad raised his glass and said, “Now that is an investment in the child who knows how to enjoy life.”

Everyone laughed.

Then my mother turned to me.

She placed a $2 scratch-off ticket in my palm and smiled.

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