Brenda Miller stood in the doorway, her arms crossed. There was no warmth in her eyes, only the detached appraisal one might give a piece of furniture that no longer fit the decor. "The DNA results came back this morning. You're not our daughter."
The statement didn't detonate like a bomb. Instead, it seeped into Chloe's bones like a slow-acting poison she'd been unknowingly ingesting for years. It explained the constant comparisons, the casual neglect, the way her achievements were always dismissed while her smallest flaws were magnified.
"Our real daughter, Joella, is home," Brenda continued, her voice devoid of any emotion except a chilling finality.
As if on cue, a window on the second floor slid open-the window of her room. A girl with bouncy curls and a frilly pink dress peeked out, a triumphant smirk on her face. She gave Chloe a little wave, a gesture of pure, unadulterated victory.
The front door opened wider and Joella skipped down the steps, immediately linking her arm through Brenda's. She smelled of expensive perfume and entitlement. "Oh, there you are," she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "Thank you for keeping my room warm for me all these years."
Chloe's gaze flickered from Joella's perfectly manicured nails to her own, which were clean but short, practical. "I never possessed anything that wasn't mine," she replied, her voice steady, betraying none of the tremor that had started in her hands.
Just then, David Miller came out onto the porch. He was a man whose spine seemed to be made of jelly, always bending toward the path of least resistance. He looked at Chloe, a flicker of something-guilt, maybe-in his eyes, but it vanished as soon as Brenda shot him a look.
"Chloe, don't make this difficult," he said, his tone pleading. "Joella's had a long trip. Let's not have a scene."
A scene. As if she were the one who had thrown her entire existence onto the lawn.
Brenda stepped forward, her lips curling into a sneer. "You were always a placeholder, Chloe. Like a dress worn by mistake. Now, the rightful owner has come to claim it." She gestured to the pile of Chloe's belongings. "Take your things and go."
The last thread of hope, the foolish, childish part of her that had always craved their approval, finally snapped. Chloe looked at the three of them-Brenda, David, Joella-a perfect, complete family. She was the odd piece, the counterfeit part that had finally been identified and discarded. There was no point in arguing. No point in begging. She felt a strange sense of release, a weight lifting from her shoulders. She was finally free from the exhausting effort of trying to belong.
She bent down, her movements calm and deliberate, and picked up the handle of her worn suitcase. She didn't have much, and what she had was now out here for the whole neighborhood to see. The humiliation was a physical thing, a hot flush on her cheeks.
"Wait."
Brenda's voice cut through the air, sharp and commanding.
Chloe paused, her back to them.
"The engagement," Brenda said, a new, calculating tone entering her voice. "The one with the Blackwood family."
David's head snapped up, his eyes widening in sudden realization. The Miller Corporation was teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, and the marriage alliance with the Blackwood empire was their only lifeline. The contract was ironclad, arranged years ago between the two families. It was for "the Miller family's daughter."
"That contract," David said, stepping forward, his voice suddenly urgent. "It belongs to this family. It belongs to Joella now."
Joella's eyes lit up, the prospect of marrying into the legendary Blackwood family making her practically vibrate with excitement. It was just another luxury item she felt entitled to.
They weren't just kicking her out. They were trying to strip-mine her for one last asset on her way out the door.
Chloe slowly turned around. For the first time, the numbness in her chest was replaced by a surge of cold, hard fury. She looked at their greedy, expectant faces. She had been a placeholder, a cast-off heirloom. But now, in their eyes, she had suddenly become the most valuable thing they owned.