Paige had always known that her family looked perfect from the outside. Their home stood tall and polished in the quiet suburbs, a place where neighbors waved warmly and admired how well-off the household seemed. Her father, Richard, was proud of the life he had built—though much of it was sustained by the support of his second wife’s family, who helped manage the company that kept them comfortable.
Inside the house, however, perfection was only a façade.
Paige’s stepmother, Clarissa, carried herself with elegance and authority. To Richard, she was the ideal partner—organized, dependable, and endlessly resourceful. To Paige, she was something else entirely. Clarissa’s words, though sweet when Richard was near, turned sharp and cold when the door closed behind him.
Her stepsister, Marissa, mirrored her mother’s behavior. Where Paige was quiet and thoughtful, Marissa was loud, demanding, and quick to remind Paige of her place. “You should be grateful,” Marissa often sneered, “that you even get to live here.”
Richard never saw it. Or perhaps he chose not to.
Paige often wondered if her father noticed the way Clarissa’s smile faded the moment he left the room, or how Marissa’s laughter carried a cruel edge when directed at her. But whenever small cracks appeared—Paige’s trembling voice, her hesitant complaints—Richard brushed them aside. His livelihood depended on Clarissa’s family, and he could not afford to disrupt the delicate balance that kept their company afloat.
So he kept a blind eye.
Paige learned to swallow her words, to hide her bruised feelings behind polite nods and forced smiles. She carried her silence like armor, protecting herself from the sting of rejection. Yet deep inside, she longed for someone to see her truth, to recognize the quiet battles she fought each day in the home that was supposed to shelter her.
And though she did not know it yet, the silence she endured would one day demand to be broken.