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The Day They Erased Me: I Came Back

The Day They Erased Me: I Came Back

Author: : Gray Matter
Genre: Romance
My mother's impossibly sweet voice confirmed the usual: another polite banishment to an "art program." My life, I knew, had always been transactional, a mere "spare part" after I saved my sister Jessica's life. But this time, as I numbly agreed, a full-body shock pulsed through me. I remembered dying. The screech of tires, the shattered glass, the red bloom on a wedding dress. I was back. Reborn. On the very morning they first tried to erase me. My past was a relentless betrayal. Jessica, the golden child, had stolen my identity, my connection with Ethan-the man who once called me "Wren." My parents enabled her, labeling me jealous. At their engagement party, a staged "accident" left my hand bleeding, ignored. Then, my own father publicly struck me, and Ethan, the man I loved, stood by, his face utterly cold. How could they be so blindly cruel? How could my own family always choose their lies over my existence? And Ethan, who once knew my quiet soul, believed every falsehood, watching me break without mercy? The pain of betrayal was suffocating. No more. As the ultimate humiliation settled, a terrifying resolve hardened. I wouldn't fight for their approval. I wouldn't scream. I would agree to their terms, but internally, I would sever every tie. I would disappear, truly free, and build a new life where they held no power.

Introduction

My mother's impossibly sweet voice confirmed the usual: another polite banishment to an "art program."

My life, I knew, had always been transactional, a mere "spare part" after I saved my sister Jessica's life.

But this time, as I numbly agreed, a full-body shock pulsed through me.

I remembered dying.

The screech of tires, the shattered glass, the red bloom on a wedding dress.

I was back.

Reborn.

On the very morning they first tried to erase me.

My past was a relentless betrayal.

Jessica, the golden child, had stolen my identity, my connection with Ethan-the man who once called me "Wren."

My parents enabled her, labeling me jealous.

At their engagement party, a staged "accident" left my hand bleeding, ignored.

Then, my own father publicly struck me, and Ethan, the man I loved, stood by, his face utterly cold.

How could they be so blindly cruel?

How could my own family always choose their lies over my existence?

And Ethan, who once knew my quiet soul, believed every falsehood, watching me break without mercy?

The pain of betrayal was suffocating.

No more.

As the ultimate humiliation settled, a terrifying resolve hardened.

I wouldn't fight for their approval.

I wouldn't scream.

I would agree to their terms, but internally, I would sever every tie.

I would disappear, truly free, and build a new life where they held no power.

Chapter 1

"Sarah, honey, are you awake?"

My mother Linda's voice, too sweet, too careful, cut through the morning quiet.

I opened my eyes. The familiar floral wallpaper of my childhood bedroom swam into view. Sunlight, weak and grey, filtered through the blinds.

It was the day.

The day they would try to ship me off to that "special art program" in another state. A polite exile.

"Richard, she's up," Linda called.

My father appeared in the doorway, his face a mask of forced concern. "Sarah, your mother and I, we think this program will be wonderful for you. A fresh start."

Their words were a script I knew by heart.

In my past life, I had fought them. I had screamed, cried, begged to stay. Begged not to be pushed away from Ethan, even though he was already lost to Jessica.

This time, I sat up. "Okay."

Linda blinked. "Okay?"

Richard frowned. "Just... okay?"

"Yes," I said, my voice calm. "I'll go. It sounds like a good opportunity."

Their surprise was a small, bitter satisfaction. They exchanged a look. This wasn't part of their plan, my easy agreement.

Then it hit me, a full-body shock, cold and sharp.

I *remembered*.

I remembered dying. The screech of tires, the shattering glass, the red bloom on the wedding dress in the shop window as my vision faded. Ethan and Jessica's wedding.

I was back. Reborn.

This was the morning of the day they announced their engagement, the day they tried to get me out of the way.

I had a second chance.

A chance to escape.

My existence had always been a transaction.

I was Sarah Miller, conceived via IVF, my genes picked apart before I was even a cluster of cells. All to be a perfect bone marrow match for Jessica, my older sister, who was dying from aplastic anemia.

I saved her life.

And in return, I was the family's shadow, the spare part, the constant reminder of Jessica's brush with death.

They loved Jessica, the survivor, the golden child.

I was just... there. Necessary, once. Now, an inconvenience.

Years later, after Jessica was healthy and blooming, Ethan Ashford crashed into our periphery.

Heir to an old-money New England dynasty. A polo accident had scrambled his brain, left him with amnesia, hidden away on a remote family estate to recover.

I was working a temp job there, an assistant to his private nurse.

He couldn't remember faces, but he remembered my voice.

I read Walt Whitman to him, "Leaves of Grass." I hummed old folk songs.

He called me "Wren." I never told him my real name. It was safer that way, a secret world just for us.

We connected, a quiet, deep understanding. He gave me a small, antique silver compass charm. "It will always lead you to good things, Wren," he'd said, his voice raspy. "When I'm better, we'll find each other properly."

A promise.

But as his body healed, his memory of "Wren" remained a fragile whisper.

Jessica, my sister, saw her chance.

Our parents helped. They always helped Jessica.

They manufactured a family emergency, sent me away.

Jessica, armed with details stolen from my journal, presented herself to Ethan. She became "Wren."

She was charming, beautiful, everything their families wanted.

For years, I tried to tell Ethan.

He, cocooned by Jessica's lies and our parents' slander – they painted me as jealous, unstable – turned on me with a cruelty that broke me piece by piece.

"You're delusional, Sarah," he'd sneered, Jessica clinging to his arm, her eyes full of false pity.

The final time, the day before their wedding, he publicly denounced me.

That night, the brakes on my car failed.

Jessica's desperate, final act to silence me. I knew it, even as the world went black.

My phone buzzed on the nightstand.

A text. From Ethan.

*Ashford Penthouse. Now. We need to talk.*

The same cold summons as before. The prelude to my humiliation.

My parents would be thrilled I was going. It fit their narrative of me chasing him.

This time, I wouldn't cry. I wouldn't beg.

I dressed carefully. A plain dark dress. No makeup.

My hand closed around the small, cool shape of the silver compass charm in my pocket. Wren's compass. My compass.

The Ashford penthouse buzzed with pre-party chaos. Caterers, florists, staff rushing everywhere.

Ethan and Jessica stood near the vast windows overlooking the city. Jessica, radiant in a white dress, leaned into him.

They turned as I approached.

Ethan's face was cold, impatient. "Sarah. We need to be clear."

He was about to launch into the same wounding speech, the one that had flayed me alive last time.

I spoke first, my voice quiet but firm. "Ethan, Jessica. I understand. I'm not wanted here. I wish you both happiness." I paused. "My parents want me to leave town. I'll be going."

Ethan looked thrown. This wasn't the desperate, hysterical Sarah he was expecting.

Jessica's smile tightened.

As I turned to leave, a heavy catering cart, laden with champagne flutes, suddenly rolled free.

It careened towards us.

Ethan's reaction was instant. He yanked Jessica behind him, shielding her.

The cart slammed into me.

Not hard enough to knock me down, but enough to send me stumbling. My hand shot out, landing on a table edge where a glass had just been set down.

It shattered.

Sharp pain, then warmth, as blood welled from a deep gash in my palm.

"Oh my god, Jessie, are you alright?" Ethan fussed, ignoring me completely.

Jessica, ever the actress, let out a little yelp. "My ankle! I think I twisted it, dodging that thing!"

At the urgent care, it was a repeat performance.

My parents arrived, their faces etched with worry – for Jessica.

"Jessica, darling, are you okay?" Linda cooed, rushing to her side.

Richard hovered. "That clumsy staff, we'll have words!"

Ethan was all solicitous concern for Jessica's "sprained" ankle.

I sat alone, my hand wrapped in a blood-soaked paper towel, a throbbing ache spreading up my arm.

A nurse, glancing at my bleeding hand and then at the family drama, muttered to a colleague, "Some people."

The doctor finally stitched my palm, his expression grim as he noted the family's blatant neglect.

The cut was deep. It would scar.

Another scar, courtesy of the Millers and Ashfords.

But this time, as I stared at the neat row of black stitches, I felt a strange calm.

This was the price of admission to my new life.

Let them have their drama.

I was already gone.

I closed my eyes, the memory of "Wren" and her compass a small, steady point of light in the darkness.

I wouldn't fight for Ethan. Not anymore.

He wasn't worth it.

Chapter 2

The urgent care room was cold.

A nurse came in. "Your family is very concerned about your sister's ankle."

She looked at my bandaged hand. "You doing okay, honey? That was a nasty cut."

"I'm fine," I said. It was the truth, in a way I hadn't been before.

The pain in my hand was real, but the old agony in my chest was... quieter.

Through the partly open door, I saw them. My parents, Richard and Linda, fussing over Jessica, who was propped on a gurney, her face a mask of brave suffering. Ethan stood beside her, his hand resting on her shoulder.

They were a perfect tableau of concern.

I was invisible. Still.

Jessica, spotting me, managed a weak, pitying smile. "Oh, Sarah, you poor thing. Are you alright? It all happened so fast."

Her voice was syrupy sweet.

"She'll be fine," Linda said dismissively, not even looking at me. "Sarah's always been a bit clumsy."

"Yes," Richard added, his tone stern. "She needs to be more careful. Especially around Jessica, given her delicate health."

Delicate health. Jessica hadn't been truly sick in fifteen years. But it was their go-to excuse for everything.

Ethan's gaze flickered to me, unreadable, before returning to Jessica. "Just rest, Jessie. We'll get you home."

The familiar script. Jessica, the fragile victim. Sarah, the careless problem.

I remembered countless times.

Jessica "accidentally" tripping and scraping her knee, then crying until I was blamed for not watching her.

Jessica "misplacing" her expensive birthday gift, only for it to be found in my school bag, followed by accusations of theft and weeks of silent treatment.

Jessica "fainting" from "stress" before my art scholarship interview, causing me to miss it.

Each incident, carefully orchestrated. Each time, my parents siding with her, their disappointment in me a heavy cloak.

Ethan, in the years of their deception, had learned this script too.

He'd absorbed their narrative of me: the jealous, unstable younger sister, a constant source of trouble.

The pain of those memories was still there, a dull ache.

But the burning rage, the desperate need to make them see, to make Ethan understand – that was fading.

What was the point?

They would never change.

He would never see.

I wouldn't fight them anymore. I wouldn't try to claw my way back to a place I was never truly wanted.

Peace. That's what I wanted.

Even if it meant being utterly alone.

Later, back at the penthouse, Jessica found me in the guest room they'd assigned me, away from the main preparations for the engagement party.

She leaned against the doorframe, a smug little smile playing on her lips.

"So, the art program," she said, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "Such a shame you have to leave. But I guess it's for the best. For everyone."

She was testing me. Prodding for a reaction.

The old Sarah would have risen to the bait.

"It's a good opportunity," I said, my voice even. I continued packing the small bag I'd brought.

"Right," Jessica said, her smile faltering a little at my lack of engagement. "And Ethan... well, he's so happy, Sarah. We're so happy. It's what he's always wanted. Someone stable. Someone... like me."

The implication was clear. Someone not like you.

I didn't look at her. I folded a sweater.

"I'm glad for you both," I said.

Her eyes narrowed. This wasn't the reaction she wanted. She needed me to be upset, to fight, to prove her narrative right.

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