Adopted at nine, I thought I’d found a home—Sunny the dog, warm beds, and loving parents. But Ava, my adoptive sister, made it clear I didn’t belong. For eight years, she stabbed silently: ruined projects, whispered lies, stolen clothes. My parents saw none of it.
Then came a full scholarship—the first time I felt truly seen. Ava mocked me, but I focused on my future. At graduation, she tripped me on stage, a cruel punchline after years of torment. Cameras caught it all. The school revoked her awards and scholarship.
My parents apologized. I spoke for the invisible kids: “You already have a place.”
That fall, moving into my dorm, I found a gift from a kind teacher: a note and a journal.
I hadn’t fallen—I’d risen.