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A Love That Never Was Novel Cover

A Love That Never Was

I was a brilliant scientist, but in my family, I was always the shadow to my perfect, manipulative sister, Jetta. On the day I was set to receive the prestigious Harrison Award, my family was only focused on her graduation party, dismissing my life's work as a mere hobby. That same day, I was brutally attacked in my own lab. The men who did it used Jetta's keycard and sneered that she sent them to "teach me a lesson" and put me in my place. Bleeding out on the cold floor, I made one last desperate call to my fiancé, Hayden. "Stop being so dramatic," he snapped before hanging up. "This is Jetta's big day. Don't you dare ruin it for attention." My mother came downstairs, saw nothing but a mess, and left a voicemail scolding me for being selfish. My soul ripped free from my body, forced to watch them celebrate. I saw the love in Hayden's eyes-not for me, but for Jetta. To them, my death was just another one of my "attention-seeking stunts." Now, as a ghost trapped in my own home, I watch them find my body and slowly piece together their neglect from my journal. But they've overlooked the one thing that will expose it all: the memory pendant around my neck, which recorded every horrifying second of the truth.
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Chapter 4

The house grew quiet as the last echoes of laughter faded. It was well past midnight. Still, no Cheslie. Beverly, nursing a slight headache, felt a flicker of something unsettling. Guilt, perhaps? No, not quite. More like irritation. Cheslie was making a statement, she was sure of it.

"She'll come around," Beverly muttered to herself, walking into the empty kitchen. She grabbed a plate, piled it with Jetta's leftover salmon, and covered it with cling wrap. "See? I still care. We're not completely ignoring her." She left the plate conspicuously on the counter, a token offering.

My spirit, hovering in the kitchen, watched the plate with a detached amusement. Food. The ultimate gesture of familial affection. But I was beyond hunger, beyond human needs. The salmon sat untouched, a silent testament to my new, horrifying reality.

Camden, rubbing his temples, walked into the kitchen. "Mom, you really think she's just… out there?" he asked, a hint of unease in his voice. "Maybe I should just go check her lab, make sure she's not just sulking down there."

"No!" Jetta's voice, shrill and sudden, cut through the quiet. She had just come downstairs, her face pale. She clutched her arm, a thin red line marking her palm. "Ow! What was that?"

Everyone rushed to her side. Kyle, Beverly, even Hayden, who seemed to materialize out of nowhere.

"Jetta, darling, what happened?" Beverly cried, her voice laced with panic. "Are you alright? Let me see!"

Hayden gently took Jetta's hand, his eyes filled with genuine concern. "It's bleeding. What did you touch?"

Jetta whimpered, her lower lip trembling. "I… I was just going to get a glass of water, and then… this was on the counter. It… it cut me!" She pointed a trembling finger at a small, intricately carved letter opener. My letter opener. The one I used to open research correspondence.

Beverly gasped. "That's Cheslie's! That awful thing she insisted on keeping." Her eyes narrowed. "She left it out. On purpose. This is a deliberate act!"

Jetta nodded, tears welling in her eyes. "She… she sent it to me. With a note. Said it was a 'gift' for my graduation. I thought she was finally being nice." Her voice was a soft sob, brimming with feigned betrayal. "But she must have left it there… knowing I would find it."

"How could she be so malicious!" Kyle roared, his face turning a dangerous shade of red. "She purposely tried to harm her sister! On Jetta's graduation day! This is beyond unacceptable!" He slammed his fist on the counter, rattling the salmon plate. "I knew she was dramatic, but this… this is pure malice!"

"Dad, maybe I should still check the lab, just to be sure," Camden said, hesitating. "Maybe she's just… having a moment."

"No!" Jetta cried out, clutching Hayden's arm, her face contorted in a mask of pain. "Don't leave me, Camden. It hurts so much. What if she's still lurking, waiting to do something else?" Her eyes were wide with fear, a masterclass in manipulation.

My spirit, watching their furious condemnation, felt a familiar ache of unfairness. They always jumped to the worst possible conclusion about me. Always. The truth, however horrific, was still miles away from their prejudiced minds.

Kyle, Beverly, and Hayden ushered Jetta out of the kitchen, their voices a flurry of concern and furious accusations against me. My spirit was left alone in the quiet kitchen, the untouched plate of salmon a lonely sentinel. I sighed, a soundless expulsion of air. There was no point. They would never believe me. They never had.

"Poor Dr. Crane," a soft voice startled my spectral form. It was Mrs. Gable, the household manager, her kind, wrinkled face etched with concern. She had been with the family for decades, a silent observer of our fractured dynamics. She had seen my struggles, my quiet resilience. "Why didn't you ever stand up for yourself, child? Why let them walk all over you?" She shook her head sadly, then turned off the kitchen lights and left.

I drifted silently back to my lab, the scene of my demise. My spirit settled near the cold metal table. My eyes, though they saw nothing tangible, focused on the dull glint of my award, still in its box. Beside it, my journal lay open.

"99." The number stared back at me, a silent accusation. My childhood flashed before my eyes, a series of vignettes illustrating that endless tally.

I remembered the "Talent Ceremony," a Crane family tradition. When a child turned five, they were presented before the elders, their innate gift revealed. Camden, at five, had effortlessly commanded metal, twisting delicate silver into intricate shapes. Kyle had beamed, openly praising him. "A true Crane," he'd declared.

Then Jetta's turn came. She had revealed a rare, almost preternatural ability to soothe injuries, to accelerate healing with a mere touch. Beverly had wept with joy, cradling Jetta, declaring her a "miracle." The golden child.

I had waited, my small heart pounding with anticipation. What would my gift be? The elders had asked me to focus. I had tried. My gift, when it finally manifested, was subtle. I could perceive the intricate structures of living cells, the hidden languages of DNA, the precise mechanisms of disease. It was a scientific mind, a unique insight into the building blocks of life.

Silence. The elders exchanged polite, strained glances. Kyle cleared his throat. "Interesting, Cheslie," he'd said, his voice devoid of the earlier enthusiasm. Beverly had merely smiled weakly.

From that day on, I was "ordinary." The "academic one." The one who wouldn't inherit the grand surgical dynasty. My education, my resources, were always "sufficient," never "exceptional." Camden and Jetta had the best tutors, the most cutting-edge equipment. I had to fight for every research grant, every piece of technology. Even when my insights led to breakthroughs, they were overshadowed, ignored, deemed "less significant" than a successful surgery. The Crane family believed in the power of bloodline, of tangible, visible talents. My inner world of microscopic wonders was invisible to them.

And so, I became negligible. A quiet shadow, easily forgotten, always disposable.

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