The Forgotten Daughter A Helicopter Saluted On Graduation Day-eirian

I almost did not attend my younger sister’s graduation.

I sat in the university parking lot that morning with both hands around a paper coffee cup, watching families walk past with flowers and proud faces, and I already knew where I belonged.

Nowhere anyone would notice.

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The air smelled like fresh-cut grass and wet stone.

The kind of spring morning that should have felt clean.

Across campus, the brass band kept warming up in uneven little bursts, and every note seemed to land inside me with a warning.

Turn around.

Go back to the rental car.

Nobody will miss you.

That last part was not self-pity.

It was experience.

My name is Rebecca Carter, and in my family, I had spent most of my life learning how to take up less space.

My younger sister, Olivia, had taken up the rest of it without ever being asked not to.

She was not cruel in the obvious way when we were children.

That would have made everything easier to name.

She was simply loved loudly.

My parents saved their soft voices for her.

They remembered her favorite breakfast, her test dates, her school plays, her friends’ names, the color dress she wanted for prom, and the exact way she liked her coffee once she was old enough to drink it.

With me, they remembered the useful things.

Rebecca can drive.

Rebecca can wait.

Rebecca won’t make a fuss.

By the time I moved to Colorado, I had already become a footnote in my own family.

They treated my life out west like a weather report from a state they had no plans to visit.

Still cold out there?

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