My Family Called Me A Failure — Until My Sister Confessed On My Phone-Teptep

I never told my parents I was a federal judge.

To them, I was still the “dropout failure”, the eldest daughter who had apparently wasted every chance she had been given.

Vanessa was the golden child.

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She was the one whose photo stayed on the mantelpiece.

She was the one whose birthdays had proper cakes, proper guests, proper speeches.

She was the one my mother defended before she had even heard the accusation.

I had made peace with that, or at least I had learnt to live around it.

Then Vanessa took my car and came back with the front bumper crushed.

The rain had turned the driveway silver.

My headlight was scattered over the wet pavement in small, glittering pieces.

One jagged stripe of red paint ran along the side of my car, bright against the dull bodywork.

The house behind us still looked ordinary.

Curtains half drawn.

Hall light on.

A mug of tea cooling on the table by the door.

My last cardboard box sitting beside the umbrella stand, its corners softened by the damp.

That box held books my parents had refused to send me for three years.

Law books.

Even when I came to collect them, my mother had rolled her eyes and said, “Still clinging to all that, are you?”

She thought they were props.

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