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The Discarded Daughter's Rise

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 602    |    Released on: 24/06/2025

of fatherly duty. My maternal grandmother, Rose, had insisted. She' d told him I could be useful, a live-in babysitter and maid for Matthe

st feet apart, their lawyers whispering in their ears. They fought viciously, not for me, but for Matth

ying hair, finally looked at me. It was

have a preference

looked at the empty space where my mother should ha

I asked the judg

ictory he didn' t want. The moment we left the cou

rove me to a bus station. He pulled over to the c

w crumpled bil

t call me unless it' s an emergency.

drive and pulled away, leaving me standing on

ange and purple. The cold seeped into my bones. Every car that

. I was shivering, my teeth chattering. Just as I was about to give up, to c

' t my

my Gran

anything, just wrapped me in a hug that smelled like cinnamon and soap. She

all, humble house in a dif

rk," she said, her voice gentl

ma Rose raised me. She used her meager social security checks and the money she made collec

es, and a pile of returned, unsent letters to my mother. The illusion shattered, but in its place, a fierc

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The Discarded Daughter's Rise
The Discarded Daughter's Rise
“Christmas morning should have been filled with joy, but for me, it was the day my hard work, my straight-A report card, was ripped to shreds by my father. Instead of comfort, my own paternal grandmother slapped me, calling me a "bad omen" just like my mother, Brenda. My mother, a paralegal who valued appearances, had vanished weeks prior, only for divorce papers to appear. Soon after, my father dumped me at a bus station, tossing a few crumpled bills and driving off, telling me not to call him, even in an emergency. Hours passed, the cold seeping into my bones, every hopeful car not hers, until finally, it was my Grandma Rose who saved me, wrapping me in a hug that smelled of cinnamon and soap. But the truth soon crushed me: my mother hadn't wanted me, and my grandmother, with her meager social security, had to invent "gifts from your mom" to keep my hope alive. Just when I thought I had a haven, Brenda reappeared, engaged to a wealthy businessman, dragging me back into her world of superficiality and ridicule. Life with them became a new hell, culminating in a public slap from my mother for making her "look bad" and finally, being thrown out onto the street with nothing but a small bag. I walked for miles, desperate to get back to Grandma Rose, the only person who had ever truly loved me. And then, just weeks before my SATs, she collapsed, needing an expensive surgery my parents coldly refused to fund, forcing me to sacrifice my future for her. She passed, leaving me heartbroken, but also with a cold, clear rage burning inside me. When my mother brazenly reappeared after Grandma' s funeral, complaining about the "inconvenience" of her death and scoffing at my efforts, something inside me snapped. I was done being a victim. I stood up, my voice dangerously quiet, and told her to get out, but not before she paid what she owed me. I sued both my parents for years of neglect, studied relentlessly, and when I emerged as the state's top SAT scorer, exposing their hypocrisy to the world. Years later, as a successful investment banker, I faced them again, broken and desperate for money, and coolly repeated their own words back: "That's not my problem." Now, holding my daughter, Rose, a child I chose to have on my own terms, I realized I had not only broken the cycle but built a new legacy of unconditional love.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10