At Her Father’s Birthday, One Dry Bread Roll Exposed Everything-Teptep

At my father’s birthday party, they gave me only a dry piece of bread. My stepmother sneered, “That’s all you deserve.” My sister smirked, “Pathetic, as always.” When the speeches started, I took the mic. “Let’s watch something special,” I said. The screen lit up, and their faces went pale. “Turn it off!” my stepmother screamed. 60 guests froze.

For a moment, Abigail Foster thought the bread might have been a mistake.

It looked too plain to be deliberate, sitting alone on the edge of her plate in a room where everything else had been chosen to impress.

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The hotel function room glowed with soft lights, polished cutlery, folded napkins, and glasses that caught the gold from the chandeliers every time someone laughed.

At the centre table, her father’s birthday cake waited with sixty candles arranged in careful rows.

Gregory Foster was turning sixty, and everybody had come to celebrate the man they thought they knew.

They saw a successful property man.

They saw discipline, generosity, and legacy.

They saw a father sitting proudly between his wife and younger daughter, accepting compliments with that modest half-smile rich men used when pretending praise embarrassed them.

They did not see Abigail at the side table near the exit.

That suited most of them.

Abigail had learnt long ago that being overlooked was often treated as good manners when the person doing the overlooking had enough money.

Her plate had no starter left on it because no proper starter had ever arrived.

Her water glass was half full, her wine glass untouched, and the bread was hard at one corner, as if it had been left too long in a basket before someone decided she could have it.

Then Karen came across the room.

Abigail knew the walk.

It was the same walk Karen used at charity lunches, office receptions, family photographs, and every occasion where her cruelty needed to arrive dressed as kindness.

Her silk dress moved softly around her knees.

Her smile did not reach her eyes.

She bent close to Abigail, close enough that the nearest table would see a stepmother checking on her husband’s oldest daughter.

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