The perfect daughter
Chapter One
The Perfect Daughter
The last day of school did not look like an ending.
It looked like noise.
Girls clustered in little circles beneath the jacaranda trees, purple petals crushed under their shoes. Boys dragged desks outside like trophies, laughing too loudly at jokes that weren’t even funny. Someone had smuggled a speaker in, and music leaked into the afternoon air — uneven, distorted, but alive.
Uniform shirts were untucked. Ties hung loose.
Freedom had already started, even if the bell hadn’t said so yet.
And right there in the middle of it all sat Calista West.
Alone on a stone bench.
Not abandoned — never that. Just... placed outside the current of things.
She watched as her classmates posed in groups, phones lifted high, cheeks pressed together like closeness was something you could capture if you held still long enough.
It was the kind of day people remembered forever.
Everyone, it seemed, except her.
It wasn’t that she didn’t belong. Everyone knew Calista West.
The quiet brilliant one.
The one teachers mentioned with pride.
The one whose name lived at the top of every list.
No one ever picked on her either. Being the daughter of Dominic West had its silent advantages. People knew where the line was — and no one crossed it.
So she existed peacefully.
Politely.
Casually.
Like a painting on a wall everyone passed but never studied.
Her life had always followed a clean, obedient pattern.
Home tuition.
Extra online classes.
Straight home after school.
No lingering by the gates.
No study groups that turned into gossip sessions.
No “let’s just hang out.”
“Calista!”
She turned to see Juana weaving through the chaos toward her.
Juana was the opposite of quiet — round cheeks always flushed with energy, her braids tied back with bright ribbons that somehow matched her mood every day. She carried life like it was meant to be shared loudly.
“There’s an after-party at Seline’s tonight,” Juana said, dropping beside her on the bench without waiting for permission. “You’re coming, right?”
Her eyes sparkled like this wasn’t even a question.
Calista smiled.
She always smiled.
“I’m sorry,” she said gently. “My dad’s back in town. Family dinner.”
The lie came out soft. Practiced. Familiar.
Juana’s excitement dimmed but didn’t disappear.
“Oh. Okay.” She nudged Calista lightly. “Say hi to your mom. And tell her the doughnuts were amazing.”
That made Calista laugh — a real one.
The doughnuts had started as nothing. Just something she brought one Friday during senior year.
Then someone else brought juice the next week.
Then samosas.
Soon, it became a quiet tradition — anyone who could afford it brought something to share. It spread until even other classes started doing the same.
If her grades made people respect her, that ritual made them warm to her.
At the gate, the black sedan waited.
It always did.
Leonard was already stepping out.
“Ready to go, Miss West?”
“Yes.”
She lifted a small wave toward Juana.
“Have a nice summer.”
The door shut with a soft click, and the world outside faded.
Inside the car, silence lived comfortably.
No music.
No chatter.
Just the steady hum of the engine.
Calista leaned back, watching the school disappear through the tinted window.
The noise.
The laughter.
The looseness of people who didn’t have to think before choosing their lives.
What would hers look like?
She didn’t know.
The thought sat quietly beside her all the way home.
The West estate appeared soon after — rising behind wrought iron gates like something lifted from a magazine spread.
White stone walls glowed under the late afternoon sun. Tall windows reflected the sky like mirrors. The gardens were trimmed to soft symmetry — hedges shaped just enough to feel intentional without looking stiff.
Nothing screamed wealth.
Everything whispered intention.
Inside was warmth without chaos.
Cream-toned walls.
Soft lighting.
Family portraits placed where they would naturally draw the eye.
The house was large, but never cold. Eveline had seen to that.
Reading corners tucked by windows.
Low shelves filled with books the children actually read.
A long dining table meant for conversation, not display.
It was a home built carefully — by Dominic’s discipline and Eveline’s gentleness — to feel safe.
Perfect.
Stable.
The kind of place children grew strong in.
And they had.
Her mother’s voice drifted from the sitting room—soft, measured, calm—giving instructions about dinner. Eveline West turned when she saw Calista and smiled, drawing her into a brief embrace.
“How was your last day?” she asked.
“Good,” Calista answered.
It was true. It just wasn’t enough.
Her brothers were sprawled on the floor nearby, laughter loud and unrestrained. Gabriel, fifteen—already confident, living like a free bird. Leo, twelve—sharp-eyed and carefree. They were perfect in a way only boys raised in a protected world could be.
Perhaps if she were a boy, things would have unfolded differently. But here she was.
Calista watched them with affection. She loved her family. They had given her comfort, security—everything she needed to survive.
Everything except space to become.
Gabriel and Leo’s laughter echoed from the living room floor where they wrestled over something trivial.
Gabriel — bold and already stretching into confidence.
Leo — quick and bright-eyed.
They moved freely in a world that made space for them.
Calista loved them.
She loved all of it.
Dinner was calm, warm, structured — the way it always was.
Everything where it should be.
Everything working.
Later that night, standing before her mirror, Calista studied herself.
She looked like she belonged here.
Soft like her mother.
But something about her presence felt… louder.
People noticed it.
Her mother always did.
“You’re too visible, my beautiful daughter,” Eveline would say.
“The world isn’t kind to girls like you.”
So Calista stayed within the lines drawn for her.
School.
Home.
Excellence.
Routine.
Yet as she lay in bed that night, staring at the ceiling of her perfect room inside her perfect home, something pressed quietly against her chest.
Because perfection had a rhythm.
And rhythms could become cages.
She exhaled softly.
This isn’t all my life will be.
Right?