I Paid For My Sister’s Island Wedding—Then She Hurt My Child-heuh

By the time my sister walked down the aisle, my parents had already decided the island proved everything they had always believed about us.

Emily was the golden one.

I was the mistake who had been invited because leaving me out would have looked untidy.

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That was how my mother measured kindness, not by what it cost her, but by how much she could be admired for pretending to give it.

The private island sat in the heat like something painted for people who had never worried about a bill.

White sand circled the villas, the water shone hard enough to hurt your eyes, and every polished surface seemed to whisper that someone had paid dearly for silence, service and perfection.

My parents thought that someone was Ryan’s family.

They spent the week saying so.

At breakfast, my father lifted his coffee cup and told anyone within reach that Ryan came from “proper money”.

At dinner, my mother praised the flowers as though the florist had delivered them directly to her social standing.

By the pool, she told one of Emily’s friends that some families were simply born to move in better circles.

I was standing close enough to hear.

She knew I was standing close enough to hear.

That was the point.

I did not correct her.

I did not say I had transferred the deposits.

I did not say the £2 million total had come from accounts only I controlled.

I did not say the villa key cards, the staff schedule, the late-night transport, the fireworks, the imported lace repair kit, the private chefs and the sea-facing reception deck all existed because I had signed my name and paid every invoice on time.

I let them believe what they wanted.

It was easier, at first, to let arrogance entertain itself.

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