She Was Called A Dropout — Until Her Sister Confessed In Her Car-heuh

I never told my parents I was a Federal Judge.

To them, I was just a “dropout failure” retail worker, while my golden-child sister ran for state assembly.

When she committed a felony hit-and-run in my car, my parents cornered me.

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“Take the fall! You have no future anyway,” Mum demanded.

“I hit him and left him bleeding,” my sister smirked.

“Who would ever believe a depressed shift worker?”

That was enough.

I pulled out my phone.

“Open the court,” I said.

“I have the evidence.”

The evening began with rain battering the windows hard enough to make the panes tremble.

By the time I reached my parents’ house, my coat was damp at the shoulders, my hair had curled in the wet air, and the hallway smelt of polished wood, cold coffee, and the old wool coats my mother refused to throw away.

The house had always looked respectable from the outside.

Inside, it had a talent for making people smaller.

My mother liked rooms arranged so nothing looked out of place.

Cushions squared.

Flowers trimmed.

Mugs taken away before tea had properly gone cold.

Children, too, were expected to fit the room.

Chloe had always fitted.

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