Sister Used A Debt Contract To Keep Me Hidden Until The Screen Lit Up-kieutrinh

The ballroom went quiet before the screen changed.

That was the first thing I remember clearly, not the chandelier, not the flowers, not the flash of my sister’s ring as she lifted her glass.

I sat behind the soundboard in the back booth with one hand near the keyboard and the other curled against my knee, because I needed at least one part of my body to look calm.

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Jasmine stood on the raised platform in her white gown, glowing under twenty thousand dollars of crystal light, smiling like humiliation was another decoration she had paid for.

My parents stood near the front row with the kind of pride they had only ever given her.

Aiden Caldwell stood beside her, rich enough to buy the room twice and quiet enough that nobody noticed the decision forming on his face.

Then Jasmine turned toward my booth and raised her glass a little higher.

“Especially my sister Rowan,” she said, her voice sweet enough to make poison sound like dessert.

The guests turned their heads.

I kept my eyes on the audio levels.

Jasmine smiled at the dark glass that hid me from most of the room.

“She has always known her place in the shadows, so I could shine.”

The laughter was light, expensive, and cruel.

My mother pressed one hand to her chest as if Jasmine had said something touching.

My father nodded once, almost proud, because public obedience was the family language.

Aiden did not laugh.

He released Jasmine’s hand.

Her fingers stayed curled in the air for half a second, reaching for a future that had already stepped away from her.

He took the smart-home tablet from his jacket pocket and looked toward the booth.

“Interesting,” he said into the microphone.

The sound carried through the speakers with surgical calm.

“Let’s see what the data says about who really deserves to shine.”

That was my signal.

I pressed enter.

Four months earlier, I had been in the storage closet the company called my office, sweating beside the server racks at nearly midnight.

The glass house rotated on my monitor, all clean lines and impossible windows, a cliffside home designed to make a family feel suspended over the Atlantic.

I had spent the day checking the glass railing load calculations again, because Aiden had asked if the deck would be safe for children.

Jasmine had spent the day in the real office, the one with windows, scrolling through wedding gowns.

Her name was on the project.

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