
Branded a Slut, All Because of My Stepsister’s Scheme
Chapter 5
The rage that had been building inside me for months finally erupted like a volcano.
"You want to talk about disgusting?" I screamed, my voice cracking as I wiped blood from my split lip. "You brought your mistress's daughter into our home the day after Mom's funeral! THE DAY AFTER!"
Dad's face went from red to purple, his eyes bulging with fury I'd never seen before. But I couldn't stop. All the pain, all the grief, all the months of watching him replace Mom like she'd never existed—it all came pouring out.
"You couldn't even wait for her body to get cold before you moved your little whore's bastard into her house!" The words tore from my throat like broken glass. "And you have the nerve to call me disgusting? You're a pathetic excuse for a father!"
The backhand came so fast and so hard that my feet left the ground. I crashed into the coffee table, sending Mom's favorite crystal vase—one of the few things of hers Dad hadn't already packed away—shattering across the hardwood floor. Blood filled my mouth as I struggled to push myself up, my vision swimming.
"YOU ARE DEAD TO ME!" Dad roared, standing over me like some avenging demon. Spit flew from his mouth as he screamed. "You hear me? DEAD! You are no daughter of mine! You're nothing but a worthless little slut just like your mother!"
The words about Mom hit harder than his fist ever could. I looked up at him through the blood and tears, and saw a stranger. This wasn't the man who used to push me on swings or help me with homework. This was a monster wearing my father's face.
From the stairs, I could hear Vanessa's soft whimpering, but when I caught her eye for just a split second, I saw something that made my blood freeze. Satisfaction. Pure, cold satisfaction, quickly masked by another sob.
I hauled myself to my feet, my legs shaking. "I hate you," I whispered, then louder, "I HATE YOU!"
Dad raised his hand again, and I flinched, but I didn't back down.
"Go ahead," I spat, blood staining my teeth. "Hit me again. That's all you know how to do, isn't it? Hit things that can't hit back."
His hand trembled in the air between us, and for a moment I thought he might actually kill me. Then he dropped it, his face twisting with disgust.
"Get out," he said, his voice deadly quiet. "Get your things and get out of my house. You have ten minutes."
"Gladly."
I stumbled upstairs, my ribs screaming with every step. In my room, I grabbed my backpack and stuffed it with whatever I could—some clothes, my laptop, the few photos of Mom I'd hidden from Dad's purge. My hands shook as I packed, adrenaline and shock making everything feel surreal.
Ten minutes later, I was back downstairs. Dad stood by the front door like a bouncer, his arms crossed. Vanessa had moved to the living room, curled up on the couch with tissues, the picture of wounded innocence.
"Don't ever come back," Dad said as I reached for the door handle. "You're not welcome here. Not ever."
I turned to look at him one last time. "Good. I'd rather sleep in the gutter than spend another night under the same roof as you."
I slammed the door behind me so hard the windows rattled.
As I walked down the driveway, I could see neighbors peeking through their curtains, drawn by the shouting. Mrs. Henderson from next door was openly staring from her porch, her mouth hanging open. The shame burned almost as much as my injuries, but I kept my head high.
I didn't look back.
By the time I reached campus the next morning, sleeping on a park bench had left me stiff and sore, but that was nothing compared to what waited for me at university.
The first sign something was wrong was the way conversations stopped when I walked by. Groups of students would be talking and laughing, then suddenly fall silent, their eyes following me with a mixture of disgust and fascination.
Then I heard the whispers.
"That's her."
"#SlutGirl."
"Can you believe she did that to her own sister?"
My blood turned to ice. I pulled out my phone with trembling fingers and opened social media. The first post that came up made me physically sick.
It was the photo—the one Dad had shown me—but now it was everywhere. Twitter, Instagram, Facebook. The hashtags made my stomach churn: #SlutGirl #HomewreckerEmily #SisterBetrayer #WhoreOfTheDay.
Vanessa had posted it with the caption: "When your own sister destroys your life 💔 Some people have no shame. #heartbroken #betrayed #sisterfromhell"
The post had thousands of likes, hundreds of shares, and the comments... God, the comments were vicious.
"What a disgusting whore."
"Poor Vanessa, she deserves so much better."
"Emily Carter is trash. Hope she gets what she deserves."
I stumbled toward my first class, but the hallways felt like running a gauntlet. Students pointed and laughed. Someone called out "Hey, SlutGirl!" and a chorus of laughter followed. My face burned with humiliation as I kept my eyes on the floor.
In Literature class, Professor Williams looked at me with such open disgust that I wanted to disappear into the floor. When I tried to participate in the discussion about moral corruption in Victorian novels, he cut me off with a sharp "I think we've heard enough from you, Miss Carter."
The snickers from my classmates felt like knives.
During the break, I overheard Jessica Vance holding court near the vending machines, Vanessa's friends gathered around her like disciples.
"I can't believe Emily would do that to poor Vanessa," Jessica was saying, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "Vanessa is being so strong about it. I would have completely fallen apart."
"She's such a saint," another girl agreed. "I mean, if my sister stole my boyfriend and then flaunted it online, I'd never forgive her."
"Did you see the photo though?" someone else whispered. "She looks so... desperate. Like she was throwing herself at him."
I tried to walk past them to get to my next class, but Jessica spotted me.
"Oh look," she said loudly, "it's the sister-stabber herself."
The group turned to stare at me with matching expressions of disgust. I quickened my pace, but their laughter followed me down the hall.
By lunchtime, I was ready to collapse. I grabbed a sandwich from the cafeteria and found an empty table in the corner, hoping to eat in peace. But even there, I could feel eyes on me, hear the whispers.
Then someone threw a french fry at my head.
"Oops," came a mock-innocent voice from across the room. "Sorry, SlutGirl!"
More laughter. More pointing. More food flying in my direction.
I sat there, french fries and pieces of bread scattered around my table, and realized with crystal clarity that my life as I knew it was over. Everything I'd worked for, every relationship I'd built, every dream I'd harbored—all of it destroyed by one photograph and my sister's lies.
The worst part? I still couldn't remember what had actually happened that night.
As I sat alone in that cafeteria, surrounded by the wreckage of my reputation, I made myself a promise. Somehow, someway, I was going to survive this. I was going to find the truth.
And I was going to make them all pay.
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