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Here’s a rewritten version that keeps the same meaning: “You’re nothing like your sister,” my mom remarked at dinner. I pushed my chair away from the table and replied, “Then she can start covering your rent.” My dad went pale. “Rent? What rent?”

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Chapter 1: The Architecture of Invisibility

My mother didn’t even blink when she said it. The sentence was delivered with the casual, rhythmic precision of a knife chopping vegetables, slicing through the hum of the dinner conversation and severing something vital inside me. “You’re not half the woman your sister is.”

The words hit with such physical force that the room actually seemed to tilt on its axis. The scent of the roast chicken—dry, overcooked, identical to every Friday roast for the last decade—suddenly turned cloying in my throat. I stared at the centerpiece, a dust-free arrangement of silk lilies, and felt the silence of twenty-eight years tighten in my chest like a coiled spring.

I pushed my chair back. The scrape of wood against the hardwood floor was a violent sound in the hushed room. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage of propriety.

“Then she can start paying your rent,” I said.

My voice didn’t tremble. It was terrifyingly steady.

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