The Brain Scan That Made My Stepsister’s Perfect Lie Fall Apart-Lian

The emergency room lights buzzed above me like they were angry to still be awake.

I remember that sound better than I remember the ambulance ride, better than the nurse’s shoes, better than the exact moment the pain settled into my skull and stayed there.

Everything in the room was too white.

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The sheets. The walls. The doctor’s coat.

Even my father’s face looked washed out under the fluorescent lights, but not in a worried way.

In a caught way.

I was sixteen years old, sitting on the edge of a hospital bed with dried blood stiff in my hair and the paper sheet crackling beneath me every time I shifted.

My head felt full of wet cement.

When I blinked, the room arrived a second late.

Dr. Mitchell asked me to follow two fingers with my eyes.

I tried.

My vision slid away from him.

“Can you tell me what happened, Olivia?” he asked.

I opened my mouth.

My father answered before I could make a sound.

“She fell down the basement stairs,” he said. “She was getting decorations for Vanessa’s graduation party.”

That was the first lie.

The second one came from Lisa.

“She’s always been clumsy,” my stepmother said, with one hand curled around my father’s sleeve. “It was dark down there. She probably missed a step.”

Vanessa stood beside her in a soft sweater with her hair in perfect waves, her face folded into concern for the benefit of the doctor.

She looked like the kind of girl adults believed.

That had always been her talent.

Vanessa knew how to make a room feel lucky to be lied to.

Three hours earlier, I had caught her in the basement holding my mother’s sapphire pendant.

The pendant was not expensive in the way Lisa understood expensive.

It was not big enough to impress anyone at a graduation party, and it did not come in a velvet box with a store name people recognized.

But it had been my mother’s.

Dad used to tell me she wore it every Christmas Eve, right above the red sweater she loved, while she burned the first batch of cookies and laughed like it did not matter.

After she died, the pendant became less like jewelry and more like proof that I had belonged to someone before this new family swallowed the house.

I kept it in a storage bin with her scarf, a few cards, and one photograph where she was holding me on the front porch.

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