My father barred me from entering my own medical school graduation ceremony because my stepmother wanted her daughter to use my ticket. “You’re just a nurse’s assistant anyway, let your sister have her moment,” my father sneered, pushing me toward the exit.

My father barred me from entering my own medical school graduation ceremony because my stepmother wanted her daughter to use my ticket. “You’re just a nurse’s assistant anyway, let your sister have her moment,” my father sneered, pushing me toward the exit.

My hands were perpetually stripped raw. Even now, standing on the uneven concrete of the driveway, I could smell the caustic, medical-grade chlorhexidine sanitizer clinging to my skin—a scent that had become my permanent perfume over the last four years. My spine felt like a stack of brittle porcelain saucers, grinding together and threatening to shatter with one wrong step after another brutal twelve-hour shift at the university hospital.

I slipped my key into the lock of the back door of my late mother’s house. It used to smell of cinnamon and old books here. Now, the air that rushed out to greet me was cloying, choked with the artificial lavender diffusers Victoria Hensley, my stepmother, bought by the dozen. My father, Thomas Hensley, had spent the last five years systematically erasing my mother’s existence, replacing her solid oak antiques with Victoria’s expensive, tacky mirrored furniture and acrylic chairs.

A burst of shrill, performative laughter erupted from the formal dining room as I stepped into the hallway.

“Oh my god, you guys, this sheer detailing is literally everything.”

It was my stepsister, Haley Hensley. She was standing in the center of the room, illuminated by the harsh, blinding halo of a professional ring light, live-streaming to her followers. She twirled in a designer trench coat that probably cost more than two months of my nursing assistant salary.

I kept my head down, my heavy canvas tote bag bumping against my hip. All I wanted was the dark sanctuary of my cramped basement bedroom. I had been awake for twenty-two hours. Between rotating patient beds in the pediatric oncology ward and secretly agonizing over the final statistical models for my doctoral thesis in the bio-lab, my mind was fraying at the edges.

As I tried to quietly skirt past the dining room archway, Victoria’s sharp voice snapped like a wet towel.

“Clara. Stop creeping around.”