My sister owes $500,000,” my mother said, her voice cold enough to freeze the room. “You will pay it… or you are no longer our child.” For a second, I thought my father would stop her. — Part 2

Then my mother said the words I would never forget.

“You will transfer the money by Friday, or you are no longer our daughter.”

For a moment, I thought my father might stop her. Instead, he looked away.

Something inside me finally snapped.

I stared at both of them and whispered, “Then I choose… not to be your child anymore.”

Then Brittany raised her head and said, “Wait. What do you mean you already know?”…

Part 2

I slowly turned toward my sister.

She realized her mistake instantly. Her mouth opened, then closed, but it was too late.

My mother narrowed her eyes. “Brittany, what is she talking about?”

I reached into my laptop bag and pulled out a folder. My hands trembled, but my voice stayed steady. “Three weeks ago, I got a call from a fraud investigator at my bank.”

Brittany’s face turned pale.

I placed the first document on the table. “Someone tried to open a business credit line using my name, my Social Security number, and a forged signature.”

My mother’s expression shifted from anger to confusion. “What?”

I looked at Brittany. “The application listed me as a silent partner in your company.”

“That was a misunderstanding,” Brittany whispered.

“No. A misunderstanding is ordering the wrong coffee. This was identity theft.”

My father finally lifted his head.

I set down another page. “Then I checked my credit report. Two credit cards I never opened. One personal loan I never signed. Total balance: $86,000.”

My mother turned to Brittany. “Tell me this isn’t true.”

Brittany started sobbing again, but now her tears felt different. Less hurt. More trapped.

“I was going to pay it back,” she said.

“With what?” I asked. “More stolen money?”

Mom gripped the back of a chair as if she might collapse. “Brittany…”

But I wasn’t finished.

I pulled out the final document. “And here’s the best part. The lender holding the $500,000 debt sent me copies of the paperwork. My name is listed as a guarantor.”

My father slammed his hand against the counter. “What?”

I met his eyes. “My signature is forged there too.”

The kitchen erupted.

My father yelled at Brittany. My mother insisted this couldn’t be real. Brittany kept repeating, “I panicked,” as if panic were a legal excuse.

Then Mom turned back to me, and for a split second, I thought she might apologize.

Instead, she said, “Claire, please. If you report this, your sister could go to prison.”

I stared at her.

That was when I understood. She knew Brittany had done something wrong. Maybe not everything, but enough. And she still called me there to sacrifice myself.

“You’re worried about prison?” I asked quietly. “I’m worried that my own family tried to bury me alive financially.”

My father rubbed his face. “Claire, we can fix this.”

“No,” I said. “You can’t. Because fixing this would require all of you telling the truth.”

Brittany stood abruptly. “You won’t do it. You love me.”

Continue to Part 3 Part 2 of 3

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