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My sister hurled red wine across my dress uniform and told me I had no place in that ballroom, my father told security to get me out before I humiliated his future son-in-law, and I watched the stain slide over my ribbons, checked the countdown on my watch, and said, “You’re right. I don’t,” because in less than a minute the entire room was going to understand why I had really come.

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understand a lot of things, Harper,” I said gently.

She nodded. She accepted the sentence without flinching, without her usual defense mechanisms.

“I know,” she whispered.

That was the first honest, unvarnished conversation we had shared in over a decade. It wasn’t magical. No swelling cinematic music played in the background. No childhood closeness rushed continue reading …

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