The $2 Christmas Lottery Ticket That Exposed A Family’s Cruel Bet-chloe

My parents handed me a $2 lottery ticket on Christmas morning and gave my sister a $13,000 luxury cruise.

They thought they knew exactly who was worth investing in.

For most of my life, I had let them think that.

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I had let them believe I was the dependable one, the quiet one, the daughter who would come when called and leave when dismissed.

I had let them treat my time like loose change.

Christmas morning smelled of cinnamon coffee, pine needles, and sugar glaze melting over breakfast rolls.

My mother had made two pans, one with extra icing for Vanessa because Vanessa liked things sweet and pretty and photographed from the right angle.

I got the corner roll that had gone dry.

The fireplace clicked behind us, and wrapping paper slid under everyone’s shoes in shiny red and green pieces.

Dad sat in his recliner with a glass in his hand, already enjoying the version of the morning where he got to feel generous.

Vanessa sat cross-legged near the tree, gold bracelet shining on her wrist, hair curled loose over one shoulder like she had dressed for an audience.

She usually had.

Mom handed me a small envelope first.

It was light enough that I thought it might be a gift card.

When I opened it, a $2 scratch-off ticket slid into my palm.

“For you,” Mom said with a smile that looked soft from far away and sharp up close.

Then she added, “Two dollars of hope.”

Vanessa laughed before she could stop herself.

My aunt looked down into her coffee.

One cousin pretended to check his phone.

Dad did not pretend anything.

He enjoyed it.

Across the room, he handed Vanessa a thick glossy envelope with a ribbon around it.

She made a sound like a woman being proposed to.

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