‘Move out. You have two days.’ – My parents gave my apartment to my brother right at his engagement party… I used to think my parents truly cared about me, until they publicly gave my apartment to my twin brother – the apartment I had put $30,000 into, which was my entire savings. The moment everyone applauded to congratulate them was also the moment I realized that, for them, everything between us had ended from that day on.

My parents gave my apartment to my brother at his engagement party in a leafy suburb just outside Chicago, without even telling me. I thought my parents genuinely cared about me—until they publicly gifted my apartment to my twin brother, smiling for photos while handing over the deed to the place I’d saved from foreclosure with $30,000 of my own money. I was thirty-two years old when I watched my father hand my brother the deed to my apartment.

Not just any apartment. My apartment. The one I’d spent five years renovating with my own hands and my own money.

The one I’d saved from the bank at the last minute with a transfer that emptied my savings account. The one my parents had promised—looking me straight in the eye—would someday be mine. And there it was, a stack of papers in a cream-colored envelope, being gifted to my twin brother Connor at his engagement party like it had never been mine at all.

Like I had never existed at all. The living room of Claire’s parents’ house, a big two-story place in a quiet Illinois cul-de-sac with manicured lawns and American flags fluttering on front porches, erupted in applause. People whistled, laughed, clapped my brother on the back.

Someone shouted, “Now that’s how you start a marriage!”

Champagne glasses clinked, flashes from phone cameras went off, and for a moment all I could hear was the roar of blood in my ears. I stood frozen near the back of the room, my back pressed against a wall of family photos that weren’t mine, a half-empty champagne flute trembling in my hand. In that exact moment, as my dad pulled Connor into a proud hug, I realized something that knocked the air out of my lungs.

In my family’s eyes, I had always been—and would always be—an afterthought. Convenient, useful, expendable. My name is Avery, and what I’m about to tell you isn’t just a story about an apartment.

It’s about growing up as the backup child, the understudy to the golden boy, and what happens when the person you keep pushing aside finally decides they’re done playing nice. From our earliest memories, Connor and I might have shared the same birthday, the same DNA, and the same childhood home on the north side of Chicago, but we lived in completely different worlds when it came to our parents’ affection. I still remember our tenth birthday like a movie I’ve watched too many times.

Related Posts

My Ex-Husband Invited Me To A Wedding So Everyone Could See How “Badly” I Was Doing — Then A Billionaire Called From An Unknown Number And Whispered, “Please Don’t Hang Up… I Just Heard Your Ex Describing Exactly How He Plans To Make You Look Small Tonight.” What Happened When I Walked Into That Wedding Changed Everything In A Way No One In That Room Expected.

If someone had told me years earlier that my former husband would one day invite me to a wedding only so that an entire room of people…

I Need A Pet To Keep Me Company

A lady goes into a pet store one day. “I’m really lonely,” she says to the clerk. “I need a pet to keep me company.” “Well,” replies…

My daughter-in-law believed she was throwing a dependent old woman out of her Portland house. My son helped by carrying my suitcase to the porch. What neither of them knew was that I had spent seventeen years building a business that paid me nearly $80,000 a month—and that some women get very quiet right before they stop being easy to move.

I was sixty-eight years old when my son set my suitcase on the porch like it belonged to a stranger. He did not throw it. That would…

My Sister Cared for Our Ailing Mom, but the Doctor’s Message Changed Everything

When Mom became seriously ill, my sister Samira suddenly took on the role of the “perfect daughter,” moving in with her and insisting I stay away. Though…

My Grandma Gave Me a Strand of Pearls Every Year on My Birthday So I Could Wear a Beautiful Layered Necklace to Prom – On Prom Morning, I Found It Ruined

My grandma spent 16 years building me something for prom. By the morning of the dance, it was gone, and the person smiling about it was standing…

The day I became a director should have been one of the happiest days of my life, but my husband ruined it with a mocking smile.

The day I became a director should have been one of the happiest days of my life, but my husband ruined it with a mocking smile. He…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *