My sister didn’t just pour a glass of vintage red wine down the front of my white silk dress; she orchestrated it with the precision of a controlled demolition. She looked me in the eyes, her gaze cold and empty, and told the hovering security guard that “the help” wasn’t allowed to cry in front of the guests.
I stood there, frozen, the cold liquid seeping through the fabric, staining my skin, feeling less like wine and more like blood. The humiliation burned hotter than the summer sun beating down on the terrace. Around me, the chatter of high society dimmed into a dull roar, the clinking of crystal flutes sounding like distant alarm bells.
But as the wine soaked into my skin, I looked past her shoulder, past the sneer she wore like a crown, and saw it.
A black SUV, sleek and formidable, pulling into the valet circle. The sunlight glinted off its polished chrome.
My heart hammered a frantic rhythm against my ribs. I knew that car. I knew the man inside. And I knew that in exactly sixty seconds, my family’s entire world—the façade of perfection they had built on a foundation of lies—was going to go up in flames.
My name is Maya Vance. For most of my life, I’ve been the shadow daughter. The one who stayed in the background, a silent observer, while my older sister, Chloe, soaked up every ounce of my parents’ praise like a parched desert drinking in the rain.
I’m a researcher. I spend my days in soil labs that smell of earth and ozone, and deep-tech greenhouses humid with the breath of a thousand plants. I try to figure out how to feed a planet that’s running out of resources. It’s quiet work. It’s humble work. And to my parents, Robert and Diane, it was a source of deep, burning embarrassment.