The Birthday Party That Exposed My Father’s Hidden Signature-chloe

On my sixteenth birthday, my family left me home alone while they went to a party that was supposed to be mine.

They did not forget in the rushed, harmless way people forget candles or napkins or the good camera.

They forgot me on purpose.

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The kitchen was too quiet for a birthday.

The refrigerator buzzed against the wall, steady and irritated, while rain tapped the window over the sink.

The whole room smelled faintly of vanilla frosting, wet pavement, and the burned match I had used to light my own candle.

A cupcake sat in a cereal bowl on the counter.

The pink icing had started to slide, softening under the kitchen light, and the candle beside it had left a black crescent of soot along the frosting.

I had sung nothing.

I had made a wish anyway.

Then I had blown out the candle and stood there with my hands curled around the edge of the counter, unable to eat.

The note was taped to the refrigerator under a strawberry magnet.

Chloe had written it in her pretty, oversized handwriting, the kind she used for thank-you notes and school posters and any insult she wanted to decorate.

“Dad took everyone to the club. Don’t come. Stay out of sight. You freak.”

Under that, in my father’s narrow blue handwriting, were four words.

“Victoria will explain later. G.”

Graham Merritt.

My father.

The man who kissed the top of my head at fundraisers if a camera was nearby and looked through me at breakfast as if I had wandered in from another family.

Victoria was my stepmother, but she hated that word.

She preferred “your father’s wife.”

It sounded cleaner to her.

Less attached.

For twelve years, she taught me where I belonged without ever needing to shout.

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