Author: Admin

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    My Siblings and Cousins Bullied Me My Whole Life for Being Adopted–They Never Thought the Day Would Come When I’d Be the One Laughing

    Bullied for being adopted, Ivy spends her life feeling unwanted, until a letter, a will, and a quiet act of love change everything. In a story about survival, second chances, and choosing your own path, Ivy finally steps into the life she was never supposed to have… and makes it her own.

    I was three years old when my parents adopted me.

    After struggling for years to have a third child, a girl to “complete” the family, they brought me home. From the outside, it looked like a dream: two big brothers, a sweet little girl, and a house full of love.

    But inside the house, it was something else entirely.

    Liam and Josh were two and five years older than me. From the beginning, they treated me like a stain on the family photo. They said things when our parents weren’t around… sharp things, cruel things. Things that no child should have to hear.\

    “You don’t belong here, Ivy.”

    “You’re not even blood.”

    “You’re the reason that Mom and Dad are always tired.”

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    An upset little girl sitting on a staircase | Source: Midjourney

    And guess what? It didn’t stop with them. Our cousins, Emma, Chloe, Noah, Ryan, Ava, and Blake… all joined in.

    They made fun of the way I looked, the way I dressed, the fact that I had no baby pictures on the mantel.

    And the adults?

    They weren’t any better. Aunt Deborah acted like I was furniture that just showed up one day. Uncle Frank never made eye contact. Even the neighbors whispered about me being “the charity case.”

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    A cozy fireplace with no frames | Source: Midjourney

    The only person who ever made me feel like I wasn’t a mistake was Grandpa Walter.

    He’d pull me into his lap and tell me stories about his childhood, about fishing in the summer and how he fell in love with Grandma at a school dance. He taught me how to garden, how to cast a fishing line, how to patch a tear in my jeans.

    He told me I was stronger than I knew and every time one of the cousins tried to corner me at a barbecue or pick on me at a birthday party, he was there, stepping between us.

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    A backyard barbecue | Source: Midjourney

    “You don’t mess with my girl,” he’d say, his voice low and steel-edged.

    And then he would take me into the kitchen and slip me a sweet treat, usually a chocolate-covered donut or a cupcake.

    But then, when I turned 18… the accident happened.

    It was raining. My parents were coming back from a weekend trip, something they’d planned months before. A semi ran a red light. The impact was instant.

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    A car accident scene | Source: Midjourney

    Gone. Just like that.

    The funeral was a blur of black umbrellas and pitied glances. Everyone spoke in hushed tones, as if volume might summon more tragedy. I stood between Liam and Josh, and neither of them held my hand.

    I was the only one who didn’t cry, and somehow that made me the cold one. No one saw the way I clenched my fists to stop from shaking, my nails digging into my palm.

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    An upset teenage girl sitting in a church | Source: Midjourney

    Our aunt and uncle, Deborah and Frank, were named as our guardians. Within a week, I was living in their house.

    And the nightmare only deepened.

    They didn’t even try to pretend. I was the one doing the laundry, scrubbing the bathtub, setting the dinner table. I became invisible until someone needed something. I was Cinderella without the fairytale… with no fairy godmother, no ball, just chores and silence.

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    A teenage girl standing at a kitchen sink | Source: Midjourney

    Deborah snapped at me over crumbs on the counter. Frank barely acknowledged I was in the room. The cousins visited often, always bringing their mockery like party favors.

    “Still playing house here, Ivy?”

    “Maybe your real family just didn’t want you… did you ever bother to ask why?”

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    A snobby teenage girl | Source: Midjourney

    I stopped speaking unless spoken to. I smiled in public and cried in the garage, where the sound didn’t echo through walls. I became smaller every day until I wasn’t sure there was anything left of me at all.

    Grandpa Walter still saw me, still checked in, but his voice was getting quieter. Slower. His knees hurt more. He couldn’t shield me from everything and I never asked him to try.

    And then on Tuesday afternoon, my phone rang.

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A cellphone on a table | Source: Midjourney

    I was folding my way through an enormous pile of towels.

    “Unknown Number” blinked across the screen.

    “Hi,” a man said. “Is this Ivy?”

    “Yes,” I replied, unsure.

    “My name is Mr. Reyes. I’m the attorney for your biological father’s sister, Margot. She passed away recently, and… she left you something in her will. Let me tell you something, young lady, you’re difficult to find.”

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A close up of a lawyer talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “I’m sorry, what?” I asked, wondering if this was just another prank call from one of my insufferable cousins.

    They’d pulled pranks before, somehow always getting new numbers even when I changed mine.

    “Your aunt, Margot. She’s been looking for you for years. I know this is a lot. But she left you a private inheritance. Three million dollars.”

    I dropped the towel I was holding.

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    The corner of a navy towel on the floor | Source: Midjourney

    Three million dollars. My name in a will. A family member who remembered me.

    It felt impossible. It felt like the universe had made a mistake… but it hadn’t. I flew out to meet Mr. Reyes the following week. He greeted me with warm eyes, a stack of paperwork, and a letter sealed in a lavender envelope.

    Everything was real. Signed, notarized, and deliberate.

    Margot had left me everything: the house she’d lived in by the coast, her savings, her journals… and the final letter.

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    An envelope on a table | Source: Midjourney

    “Ivy, darling,

    You were never supposed to be forgotten. Your parents were just kids. They were scared, messy, and still growing. My brother panicked. Our parents were firm: they said adoption was the best choice for you. They didn’t want the burden.

    They told me to let it go. But I didn’t.

    I didn’t have a say then… but I promised myself. Someday, if I could, I’d make sure you knew you were never disposable. You deserved love and a life that wasn’t just survival. I looked for you quietly for years. I couldn’t risk showing up too late.

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young couple | Source: Midjourney

    This is me showing up anyway.

    You deserve joy, Ivy. You deserve to choose your own path now…

    Love always,

    Aunt Margot.”

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    A woman writing a letter | Source: Midjourney

    I read it over and over until my hands stopped shaking. She remembered me. She fought for me.

    I packed my things the next day. There was no tearful goodbye. No announcement. I didn’t owe Liam, Josh, Deborah, Frank, or the cousins a thing.

    I left a note for Deborah that simply said:

    “I found where I belong. Don’t wait up. Don’t look for me.”

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    A packed suitcase in a hallway | Source: Midjourney

    The only person I asked to come with me was Grandpa Walter.

    “Took you long enough, Ivy-girl,” he said, taking off his green garden gloves. “Now, you make your own future.”

    We moved into Margot’s house, a weathered blue cottage with white trim and ivy crawling up the porch rails, like the house had been waiting for me.

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    A blue cottage with ivy growing up the walls | Source: Midjourney

    Grandpa Walter and I were in the kitchen, the air thick with rosemary and roasted garlic. He’d handed me the lamb like it was an heirloom.

    “Fat side up,” he said, like always. “Trust the oven.”

    I peeled the potatoes at the counter while he stirred the cheesecake filling, slow and steady. I noticed the slight tremble in his hand. He smiled anyway, like it didn’t matter.

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of lamb | Source: Midjourney

    “Do you ever think about college?” he asked, almost casually, like he was asking about the weather. “It’s time now, Ivy.”

    “Not really,” I shrugged.

    “Why not?” he paused.

    “I don’t know,” I said. “It just never felt like it was for me. I was too busy surviving. And I knew that Deborah and Frank would never let me study. And now…” I gestured vaguely around the kitchen, the cottage, the quiet safety we’d built. “Now I have this.”

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling young woman standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “You have three million dollars,” he said gently. “That’s a gift, Ivy. But it’s not a future.”

    “Are you worried that I’ll waste it?” I looked at him.

    “No,” he said, cracking an egg with one hand. “I’m worried you’ll stop growing.”

    The oven beeped. I took a breath.

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    An egg in a bowl on a kitchen counter | Source: Midjourney

    “I guess I never pictured a future that was… mine,” I said. “College always felt like someone else’s plan, Gramp. Someone with real parents, real safety nets.”

    He slid the cheesecake into the oven, then wiped his hands on a towel and turned to me.

    “You’ve got something now that money can’t buy. You’ve got room to become whoever the hell you want.”

    “You make it sound easy,” I blinked.

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A smiling grandfather standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    “It’s not, sweetheart. Nothing is easy. But it’s yours. The choice, the decision, I mean…”

    I stared down at the tray of garlic potatoes, thinking. Then I smiled.

    “I want to go to culinary school,” I said. “Not because I need it to survive, but because I love this. Cooking. Feeding people. It’s the only thing that’s ever felt like home. I remember Mom and I spoke about it when I was… seven, I think?”

    My grandfather beamed.

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of roasted potatoes | Source: Midjourney

    “Then we’ll find the best damn school on the coast.”

    We didn’t say anything else. I just basted the lamb, set the table, salted the potatoes, and waited for the cheesecake to cool. And for the first time in my life, I was hungry for something more.

    Six weeks later, my grandfather and I opened a coffee shop three blocks from the shore. We named it Second Chance. He moved a little slower these days, took more breaks in the backroom.

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    The exterior of a cute coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    “Old bones, Ivy,” he’d say, waving me off with a grin.

    The first day we opened, a woman came in crying and left with a free scone. Grandpa handed out extra muffins to the kids biking to school. I baked cinnamon rolls, quiches, and pies, and practiced foaming milk hearts between rushes.

    I signed up for culinary school the following week, freshly graduated from high school. I finished high school on auto-pilot, unnoticed, just trying to get through the days. I hadn’t felt nervous in years but it was a good kind of nervous. The kind that meant something was finally moving forward.

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    Trays of pastries on a counter | Source: Midjourney

    And I smiled.

    But then the cousins started calling a few weeks later.

    “Hey, Ivy! We saw the coffee shop online, looks adorable! We should come visit sometime. We can stay with you!”

    That first text was from Emma. I blocked her.

    Then Noah texted me: “So, you’re rich now? Must be nice.”

    I didn’t answer that one either.

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman standing in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    Then Liam called.

    “I just want to talk, Ivy,” he said. “I didn’t know. I didn’t know you were going through all that… heartache. We were all just kids, you know.”

    I let him speak. I let the silence stretch out like rope. And when he was done, I said, “You were old enough to know better, Liam. You chose to be that person. And why are you apologizing now? Do you want something? A couple thousand dollars? Shares in my coffee shop?”

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A pensive young man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    Liam was quiet for a long time.

    “Are you happy, Ivy?”

    “I’m learning to be,” I replied. “Without any of you.”

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    One Saturday, my only day away from culinary school, Grandpa Walter and I sat outside the coffee shop. The ocean was calm, the breeze smelled like sugar and salt. He handed me an envelope.

    “What’s this?” I asked.

    “It’s from your parents,” he said softly. “I found it when I was getting everything together for our move here. I tucked this away years ago and forgot I still had it… figured you weren’t ready back then.”

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    An old man sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    My hands shook.

    Inside was a letter with my mother’s handwriting.

    “Dad, we’re so excited to bring Ivy home! We know it won’t always be easy but we’ve waited so long to love her. We want her to feel safe, wanted, and seen. We hope she grows up knowing she was chosen with hope in our hearts…

    We love her already.”

    I wiped a tear and folded the paper slowly.

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting at a table | Source: Midjourney

    “I think they meant it,” I said. “At least at the beginning. They were never the problem, it was… everyone else.”

    “They just didn’t know how to protect you from everything else,” Grampa nodded.

    “But you did,” I looked out at the sea.

    “You did the rest,” he patted my hand.

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A young woman sitting outside a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    That night, I lit a candle for Margot. I read one of her journals, baked a batch of shortbread cookies, and played one of her old records. I felt her there, just for a moment. A life I never got to live with her, folded into music and flour and pages she left behind.

    I never did go back to Deborah and Frank’s house. I didn’t need to. Deborah sent a card two years later when Grandpa Walter passed away.

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    A tray of freshly baked shortbread | Source: Midjourney

    “We heard. Sorry for your loss.”

    My loss? Wasn’t it our loss, I thought to myself. Grandpa Walter was our family. But I guess they couldn’t handle that he’d always treated me like his own.

    Because I wasn’t the one left behind anymore. I was just a young woman who had outgrown the cruelty, found her own peace, and stopped waiting to be chosen.

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    A card on a table | Source: Midjourney

    If you enjoyed this story, here’s another one for you |

    When Sierra turns 30, she decides to share the story that’s lived in her chest since she was ten… the day everything she believed about family changed. It’s a story about silence, survival, and the kind of love that doesn’t arrive on time… but stays when it matters most.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

  • My MIL Intentionally Sent Half the Guests to the Wrong Wedding Venue, Including My Fiance – Then Faced the Consequences

    My MIL Intentionally Sent Half the Guests to the Wrong Wedding Venue, Including My Fiance – Then Faced the Consequences

    When my mom said no one from Jeff’s family had arrived, I felt a knot tighten in my stomach. It was our wedding day. Nothing was supposed to go wrong. But someone had gone out of their way to make sure it did.

    I met Jeff three years ago at my best friend’s housewarming party. I wasn’t even planning to go that night because I had a mountain of work files to review.

    But Tara insisted, saying there was someone I “absolutely had to meet.”

    “He’s smart, kind, and actually listens when you talk,” she’d said over the phone. “Plus, he brings good wine to parties instead of cheap beer. That’s husband material right there.”

    I laughed it off, but went anyway.

    Jeff was standing by the bookshelf when I arrived, examining Tara’s collection of true crime novels.

    A close-up shot of books | Source: Pexels

    A close-up shot of books | Source: Pexels

    “Are you also into stories about terrible people doing terrible things?” I asked, gesturing toward the books.

    He laughed. “I prefer to think of them as cautionary tales about what happens when in-laws go too far.”

    Oh, the irony of that statement. If only we’d known.

    Our first date turned into a second, then a third. By our sixth month together, we were inseparable.

    Jeff was everything I’d been looking for. We shared the same values about family, our future, and even how we loaded the dishwasher (a surprisingly contentious topic with previous boyfriends).

    A man looking straight ahead | Source: Midjourney

    A man looking straight ahead | Source: Midjourney

    “I think you might be it for me,” he told me one night as we sat on his balcony, watching the sunset.

    “I think you might be right,” I replied, and meant it with every fiber of my being.

    When the time came to meet each other’s families, mine adored Jeff immediately. My dad, usually reserved with my boyfriends, invited him to watch football in his sacred den.

    Meanwhile, my mother started sending him birthday cards with money tucked inside. It was something she’d never done for any other boyfriend.

    A pink envelope | Source: Pexels

    A pink envelope | Source: Pexels

    Then came the day to meet Jeff’s family.

    His father, Robert, was charming and warm, with the same crinkly-eyed smile as his son. His younger sister, Allie, bombarded me with questions about my job as a graphic designer and showed me her own artwork.

    And then there was Melissa, Jeff’s mother.

    She didn’t even smile as she shook my hand.

    “Oh,” she said, taking in my curly hair and floral dress. “You’re not what I expected.”

    Jeff squeezed my hand reassuringly. “Isn’t she amazing, Mom?”

    A man talking to his mother | Source: Midjourney

    A man talking to his mother | Source: Midjourney

    “She’s certainly… colorful,” Melissa replied as her gaze lingered on my tattoo. It was a small sunflower on my wrist.

    Throughout dinner, she peppered our conversation with thinly veiled comments.

    “Jeff always said he’d end up with someone more… traditional.”

    “His ex, Emma, was studying to be a pediatrician. Such a noble profession.”

    “Our family has always valued certain educational backgrounds. Graphic design is, uh… creative.”

    Each comment landed like a tiny dart, but I smiled through it all. For Jeff.

    On the drive home, he apologized profusely.

    A man driving a car | Source: Pexels

    A man driving a car | Source: Pexels

    “She’s just protective. She’ll warm up to you, I promise.”

    But she didn’t.

    At every family gathering and every holiday dinner, Melissa found new ways to make me feel like an outsider. She’d conveniently “forget” to set a place for me at the table or interrupt me mid-sentence to change the subject.

    The worst came at Christmas, when she gave everyone thoughtful, personalized gifts, and handed me a generic scarf with the store tag still attached.

    “I wasn’t sure what you’d like,” she said with a shrug. “You’re so… unique.”

    An older woman | Source: Midjourney

    An older woman | Source: Midjourney

    That same night, she cornered Jeff in the kitchen. I wasn’t meant to overhear, but her voice carried through the thin walls.

    “Emma called yesterday,” she told him. “She’s back in town. Single again.”

    “Mom, stop. I’m with Rosie. I love her.”

    “But Emma understood our world, Jeff. Your father and I always thought you two would—”

    “Rosie is the one I want. The only one. Please don’t compare them again.”

    A man standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    A man standing in a kitchen | Source: Midjourney

    When Jeff proposed six months later, I said yes without hesitation. We wanted a simple wedding with just our closest friends and family celebrating our love.

    To my surprise, Melissa suddenly became involved in every detail. She suggested venues, florists, and caterers. She even insisted on handling the invitations for Jeff’s side of the family and their friends.

    “It’s the least I can do,” she said. “I want everything to be perfect for my son’s big day.”

    A woman standing in a living room | Source: Midjourney

    A woman standing in a living room | Source: Midjourney

    I relaxed a little, hoping this meant she was finally accepting me. Jeff was thrilled to see his mother taking an interest, and I didn’t want to ruin that for him.

    ***

    “Terrible news,” she said. “The venue had a flood. They’ve had to cancel all events for the next month.”

    My heart sank. “What? But everything’s arranged!”

    “Don’t worry,” she said quickly. “I’ve already found another place. It’s even prettier, and they had a last-minute cancellation. Same day, same time. I’ll handle notifying everyone on our side.”

    A wedding venue | Source: Pexels

    A wedding venue | Source: Pexels

    I opened my mouth to say I should call Jeff, but she cut in gently, “Let’s not worry him with this. You know how stressed he’s been. Just focus on getting yourself and your family there. Let me take care of the rest.”

    I hesitated, but the truth was, I was overwhelmed. The final week of wedding prep had me barely sleeping.

    So, I let it go. I trusted that Melissa had told Jeff, and I didn’t want to add to the chaos.

    ***

    On the day of the wedding, I was sitting in front of the mirror, finishing my makeup in my white silk pre-wedding robe, when my mom stepped into the room.

    A wedding dress on a hanger | Source: Pexels

    A wedding dress on a hanger | Source: Pexels

    Her face was pale.

    “Baby, please don’t worry… but I don’t see Jeff. Or his family.”

    “What do you mean you don’t see them?” I asked.

    “I mean, they’re not here. None of them.”

    My heart dropped like a stone. The wedding was supposed to start in less than an hour.

    “Where’s my phone?” I asked as I frantically searched around the dressing room. “Never mind. Give me yours, Mom.”

    Jeff’s phone went straight to voicemail.

    I tried his father, his sister… nothing.

    Finally, desperate, I called his best man, Lucas.

    A woman using her phone | Source: Pexels

    A woman using her phone | Source: Pexels

    He picked up immediately. “Rosie?! Where the hell are you?!”

    “What? Where are all of YOU? Where’s Jeff?!”

    “We’re at the venue! Everyone is looking for you! Jeff is about to cancel everything!”

    I couldn’t breathe. The room started spinning, but through the chaos in my mind, something clicked.

    “Give the phone to Jeff, NOW! He needs to talk to me first!”

    There was a pause. Shuffling. A distant, muffled voice saying, “It’s Rosie.”

    Then I heard him. Jeff.

    His voice cracked the moment he said my name. “Rosie? Where are you?”

    A man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    A man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    “No, where are YOU?!” I shouted, tears streaming down my face. My mother rushed to my side, wrapping her arm around my shoulders.

    “I’m at the venue. No one’s here from your side. It’s like… we were invited to two different weddings or something.”

    My heart sank even further as the horrible truth began to dawn on me. And in that split second, the entire puzzle came together.

    His family. My family. Two locations. My future mother-in-law had sent us in opposite directions. On purpose.

    A close-up shot of a woman's face | Source: Midjourney

    A close-up shot of a woman’s face | Source: Midjourney

    I took a deep breath. “Jeff, listen to me. This isn’t an accident. Your mom… she was in charge of your side’s invitations. She changed the venue. On purpose.”

    Silence.

    “Rosie… what are you saying?”

    I could hear the shock and disbelief in his voice.

    “She tried to set you up with Emma, didn’t she?” I asked quietly.

    A breath caught on his end.

    “Emma’s here. She’s literally here. She said your family never showed up and that… maybe the universe is trying to tell me something.”

    A man talking to his fiancée | Source: Midjourney

    A man talking to his fiancée | Source: Midjourney

    I almost laughed.

    “The only thing the universe is trying to tell us is that your mom is a manipulative snake.”

    Another pause.

    Then I heard him exhale deeply. “I’m getting in the car right now. I’m coming to you. This ends today.”

    “Where are you?” I asked, already motioning for my mom to gather my dress.

    He told me he was at the original venue that supposedly had a flood. Meanwhile, I was at the venue Melissa had told me about.

    “I’ll be there in an hour,” he said after I told him the address. “Don’t move.”

    A phone on a table | Source: Pexels

    A phone on a table | Source: Pexels

    After we hung up, I collapsed onto a nearby chair, still in my robe.

    My bridesmaids gathered around me, trying to comfort me. That’s when my dad appeared in the doorway, looking confused.

    “What’s happening?” he asked. “The guests are getting restless.”

    “Jeff’s mother sent everyone to the wrong venue,” I explained, wiping away tears. “She’s trying to reunite him with his ex.”

    “She did WHAT?” my dad asked.

    A man at his daughter's wedding | Source: Midjourney

    A man at his daughter’s wedding | Source: Midjourney

    My maid of honor, Tara, was already reaching for her phone. “I’ll tell the guests what’s happening.”

    “No,” I said suddenly, standing up. “Tell them to stay. Jeff is coming here. We’re still getting married today.”

    My mom squeezed my hand. “Are you sure, honey?”

    I nodded firmly. “I’m not letting Melissa win. Not today. Not ever.”

    Jeff arrived an hour later, driving like his entire world was on fire.

    A man's hands on a steering wheel | Source: Pexels

    A man’s hands on a steering wheel | Source: Pexels

    He ran across the lawn, where all my guests were waiting, confused and anxious. My mom had already filled them in. I stood in the middle of it all in my white robe, my hair half-curled, my eyes red from crying.

    He stopped when he saw me. Just stood there, breathless.

    And then he whispered, “You’re here. You didn’t leave.”

    I walked up to him slowly. “Neither did you.”

    We just stared at each other for a long moment.

    A man standing outdoors | Source: Midjourney

    A man standing outdoors | Source: Midjourney

    Then I said, “Your mom tried to destroy us.”

    And he nodded. “I know. She took my phone last night. Said it was bad luck to talk to you before the ceremony. She did the same with my dad. She wanted to control every detail. I didn’t see it then.”

    I swallowed hard. “She called me a week ago. Said the original venue had been flooded and everything was canceled. She told me not to bother you about it, and that she’d take care of notifying your side. I believed her. I thought I was helping by staying out of it.”

    An older woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    An older woman talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney

    He stared at me, stunned.

    “I didn’t question it,” I added quietly. “I was so busy with dress fittings and family logistics, I just… let her handle it.”

    Then I felt Jeff’s fingers gently lifting my chin.

    “Hey, look at me. We’re still getting married today, right? If you’ll still have me and my apparently insane family.”

    Before I could answer, a sleek black car pulled up.

    A black car | Source: Pexels

    A black car | Source: Pexels

    And then… she showed up.

    My MIL.

    Behind her was Emma.

    Jeff stepped in front of me, protective now.

    “Why?” he asked his mother. “Why would you do this?”

    She didn’t even blink.

    “Because she’s not right for you. Emma loved you first. She understands you. She knows this world, our values—”

    I let out a sharp laugh. “So, you just tried to break us up on our wedding day? You thought lying to everyone, stealing phones, and creating chaos was a great idea?”

    “I was trying to save my son from a mistake,” she snapped. “You would’ve thanked me later.”

    An older woman standing outdoors | Source: Midjourney

    An older woman standing outdoors | Source: Midjourney

    Jeff shook his head. “You’re the mistake. You lied. You humiliated both families. And you disrespected the woman I love. Do you know what this day was supposed to be?”

    She tried to say something, but he cut her off.

    “You’re not welcome at the ceremony. Not today. Not after this.”

    Everyone was silent. Then someone clapped. Then more. My aunt. His best man. A slow-building wave of applause as people realized what had just happened.

    Emma turned and walked away without a word.

    Meanwhile, Melissa stood frozen.

    An upset woman | Source: Midjourney

    An upset woman | Source: Midjourney

    Jeff turned back to me. “So… you still wanna marry me, or…?”

    I smiled through tears. “Even if I have to walk barefoot down the aisle and re-do my makeup. Yes.”

    And we did.

    Two hours later than planned, with half the guests missing, I walked down the aisle to Jeff. My makeup was hastily fixed, my hair simpler than intended, but my heart was full.

    As we exchanged vows, I looked into Jeff’s eyes and saw everything I needed. I saw love, commitment, and a promise that we were in this together, no matter what storms came our way.

    A couple on their big day | Source: Pexels

    A couple on their big day | Source: Pexels

    One year later, we received a letter from Melissa. Therapy had opened her eyes, she said. She wanted to apologize in person.

    So, we met her at a coffee shop. Her hands shook as she slid an envelope across the table.

    “I was wrong,” she said simply. “About everything. I see that now.”

    Inside the envelope was a check. It was just enough to cover the costs of our chaotic wedding day.

    “I can’t change what happened,” she continued. “But I want to try to make amends.”

    A woman sitting in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    A woman sitting in a coffee shop | Source: Midjourney

    It was never about the money. What truly mattered was that she finally acknowledged the pain she caused and took responsibility for it.

    Since then, we’re learning to rebuild, one moment at a time. And maybe that’s what real family is.

    Having a real family doesn’t mean everything has to be perfect. It means there’s room for growth and forgiveness. Having a real family means being surrounded by people who are willing to show up.

    If you enjoyed reading this story, here’s another one you might like: When my brother and his wife stole my credit card, they thought they were just taking plastic. What they really took was my trust. What happened next was something they didn’t see coming.

    This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

    The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.