The day before my sister’s wedding, my mother took scissors to my hair and hacked off twenty inches because she said I wasn’t allowed to compete with the bride. My father looked at the damage, shrugged, and told me to wear a hat because my sister was marrying a billionaire and I was ruining the mood. I touched the butchered ends, went completely cold, and said nothing. I just reached for my phone. The next day, while five hundred high-society guests sat in stunned silence, no one was looking at my ruined hair anymore. They were watching federal fraud investigators march straight down the aisle toward the groom.

Part 1: The Useful Sister

I was twenty-six and paying for my sister’s wedding with money no one ever intended to repay.

That was the plain version. The fuller one was uglier. Chloe was marrying Julian Sterling, heir to a real estate empire big enough to make my parents act like they’d been invited into royalty. To them, this wedding was not a marriage. It was a promotion.

I was the unpaid infrastructure.

For a year, I covered whatever my parents could not. Venue deposits. Florist shortages. Last-minute dress changes. Quiet little financial disasters that would have humiliated them if anyone else had seen the books. Sixty thousand dollars of my own savings disappeared into a day that was never about me.

No one thanked me.

Why would they? In my family, Chloe was the star. I was the quiet one who fixed the wiring behind the walls. I handled details, absorbed stress, and stayed out of the photos.

The one thing they could not shrink was my hair. It was long, thick, natural auburn, the kind of hair people remembered. It was also, apparently, a threat.

At Chloe’s final dress fitting, she saw me in the mirror and started crying because my bridesmaid dress looked “too flattering.” While she performed her breakdown, the boutique announced a fifteen-thousand-dollar balance on her gown. My mother froze. I paid it.

Chloe never even looked at the card.

Later, my mother dragged me behind a rack of veils and hissed, “Tone down your whole presence. Your sister gets one chance at greatness. Stop competing.”

I nodded because exhaustion is a kind of surrender.

That night I locked my bedroom door, took a sleeping pill, and fell asleep believing at least the room was mine.

I was wrong.

Part 2: The Cut

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