
Branded a Slut, All Because of My Stepsister’s Scheme
Branded a Slut, All Because of My Stepsister’s Scheme Chapter 1
The silence in my dorm room felt suffocating, pressing against my chest like a weight I couldn't shake off. I sat cross-legged on my narrow bed, staring at the empty space where Mom's belongings used to be—her favorite lavender scarf, the small framed photo of us at my high school graduation, the worn copy of Pride and Prejudice she'd read to me countless times. Everything was gone now, packed away by Dad the day after the funeral like she'd never existed at all.
The afternoon light streaming through the window seemed too bright, too cheerful for the hollow ache that had taken up permanent residence in my chest. Three weeks. It had only been three weeks since Mom died, and already the world felt like it was spinning without me.
The sharp sound of my dorm door slamming open made me jump, my heart hammering against my ribs. Dad stood in the doorway, his face set in that familiar expression of cold irritation that had become his default whenever he looked at me. His expensive suit was perfectly pressed, his graying hair slicked back with the same precision he applied to everything in his life—everything except being a father to me.
"Emily." His voice cut through the room like a blade. "We need to talk."
I scrambled to my feet, smoothing down my worn jeans with trembling hands. "Dad, I—"
"Sit down." He didn't wait for me to comply, instead moving to stand by the window with his back to me, hands clasped behind him like he was addressing a board meeting. "There are going to be some changes at home."
My stomach twisted into knots. Changes? What kind of changes? I perched on the edge of my bed, gripping the faded comforter Mom had bought me when I first moved into the dorms. "What do you mean?"
He turned around, and for a moment, I caught something flickering in his eyes—guilt, maybe, or shame. But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it. "Vanessa will be moving into the house. She'll also be transferring here, to your university."
The words hit me like a physical blow. Vanessa. His other daughter. The one he'd had with his secretary while Mom was battling cancer the first time, thinking she might not survive. The daughter he'd kept secret for years until Mom discovered the affair through a credit card statement for a child's birthday party.
"But Dad," I whispered, my voice cracking, "Mom just died. The house—it's still her house. Her things are still—"
"Your mother is gone, Emily." His tone was brutal in its matter-of-factness. "And Vanessa is my daughter too. She deserves a proper home, a proper education. She's been living in that cramped apartment with her mother for too long."
I felt like I was drowning, gasping for air that wouldn't come. "What about me? What about what I deserve?"
His jaw tightened, and I saw that familiar flash of anger that always appeared when I dared to question him. "You've had eighteen years of advantages, Emily. Eighteen years of the best schools, the best clothes, the best of everything. It's time you learned that the world doesn't revolve around you."
The cruelty in his words made my eyes burn with unshed tears. This was the man who used to read me bedtime stories when I was little, before Mom got sick the first time, before everything changed. Before he became this cold stranger who looked at me like I was a burden he couldn't wait to be rid of.
"She'll be here tomorrow," he continued, straightening his tie with sharp, efficient movements. "I expect you to make her feel welcome. She's had a difficult life, and she deserves better."
"What about Mom's room?" The question slipped out before I could stop it, desperate and small.
His face hardened further, if that was even possible. "Vanessa will be taking the master bedroom. It's larger, more appropriate for someone of her... social standing."
Social standing. The words felt like a slap. Mom's room, with its soft yellow walls and the reading nook by the window where she used to sit with her tea, would belong to her. The woman who'd helped destroy our family would sleep in the bed where my mother had drawn her last breath.
"I don't understand," I choked out, my hands shaking so badly I had to clench them into fists. "Why are you doing this? Why now?"
For just a moment, his mask slipped, and I saw something raw and ugly underneath—resentment, maybe even hatred. "Because, Emily, some of us have to live in the real world. Some of us have to make difficult choices and live with the consequences. Your mother's gone, and I have responsibilities. Vanessa needs me."
"I need you too," I whispered, the words barely audible.
He looked at me then, really looked at me, and what I saw in his eyes made my blood turn to ice. There was no love there, no warmth, no recognition of the eighteen years we'd shared. There was only cold calculation and barely concealed disgust.
"No, Emily. You need to grow up." He moved toward the door, his footsteps sharp against the linoleum floor. "Vanessa will be starting classes on Monday. I trust you'll do everything in your power to help her adjust. She's been through enough."
The door slammed behind him with a finality that echoed through my bones. I sat there in the sudden silence, my whole body trembling as the reality of what had just happened crashed over me. Dad wasn't just bringing Vanessa into our home—he was replacing me with her. The daughter who reminded him of his guilt, his mistakes, his dead wife, was being pushed aside for the daughter who represented his future, his freedom from the past.
I curled up on my bed, pulling my knees to my chest as the tears finally came. Hot, bitter sobs that tore through my chest and left me gasping for air. Mom was gone, and now Dad was gone too, in every way that mattered. I was truly alone.
The worst part wasn't even the betrayal—it was the way he'd looked at me, like I was nothing. Like the eighteen years of my life, of trying to be the perfect daughter, of watching Mom waste away while he worked late and came home smelling like another woman's perfume, meant absolutely nothing.
As the sun set outside my window, painting the room in shades of orange and gold that reminded me painfully of Mom's favorite sunset walks, I made myself a promise. I would survive this. I would survive Vanessa, survive Dad's cruelty, survive whatever fresh hell was about to walk through our front door.
I had to. Because if I didn't, if I let them break me completely, then Mom's love, her memory, everything she'd tried to teach me about strength and kindness and never giving up—it would all be for nothing.
And I couldn't let that happen. I wouldn't.
Branded a Slut, All Because of My Stepsister’s Scheme of Contents
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