At my parents’ house near Columbus, Ohio, I was still labeled “Lena the problem”—the daughter who asked uncomfortable questions, who refused to choose a “safe” career path, who never shined the way my sister supposedly did.
Charlotte Brooks was the pride of the family. The CEO. The headline name. The golden child with the camera-ready smile.
What they never realized was that their so-called disappointment had quietly built Orchid Holdings—an investment and logistics powerhouse valued at just over five billion dollars. I had structured everything deliberately: layered trusts, no public profile, no interviews, all negotiations handled through attorneys. It wasn’t embarrassment that kept me invisible. It was protection. I wanted relationships untouched by financial expectations.
That illusion shattered on a Thursday night when a sharp, searing pain tore through my abdomen. The twins’ cartoon echoed from the living room, the scent of microwaved mac and cheese lingering in the air as my hands trembled dialing my mother.
“Mom,” I whispered, forcing calm for Noah and Lily’s sake. “I’m heading to the ER. I need you to watch the kids.”
There was a pause long enough for hope to flicker.
“Oh, Lena,” Diane replied lightly, “we can’t. We have plans.”
“Plans?” I fought nausea. “I’m alone. They’re four.”
Dad’s voice cut in, irritated. “Your sister got us Adele tickets. We’re going with her. Figure something out.”
“I might need surgery.”
“You always overreact,” he said. I could hear Charlotte laughing nearby. “Call a neighbor.”
I ended the call before my voice cracked, dialed 911, and helped the twins into their shoes as my vision dimmed at the edges.
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