In the parking lot, my dad stepped in front of my car. “If you go through with this,” he said, voice low, “you’ll destroy this family.”
I looked at him—at the man who’d called me a failure while borrowing my identity like it was loose change. “No,” I said. “You did that. I’m just refusing to pretend it’s fine.”
My mom started crying again. “We can fix it,” she insisted. “We’ll pay you back. We’ll go to counseling. Just… don’t do this to your sister.”
Alyssa stood behind her, arms crossed, eyes blazing. Not once did she say sorry. Not once did she ask if I was okay.
And that’s how I knew. A second chance only matters when someone takes responsibility the first time.
I drove home with the windows down, letting the smell of smoke fade from my hair. That night I froze my credit, filed the official report, and forwarded everything to my bank’s fraud department. The next morning, I blocked Alyssa’s number. I told my parents they could contact me only through email, in writing, like any other dispute.
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