Chapter 24 When silence becomes the verdict
Hannah
The events blurred together after a while.
Galas. Charity dinners. Corporate mixers. Cultural showcases. Fundraisers where smiles were currency and appearances mattered more than truth. I attended them all at Timothy’s side, dressed impeccably, introduced carefully, spoken about as if I were an abstract concept instead of a person.
At first, I thought Loretta might avoid me.
I was wrong.
She made it her mission to find me.
Sometimes it was subtle like backhanded compliments murmured just loudly enough to be overheard, a hand brushing past me and spilling champagne on my dress with a breathy, “Oops, sorry.” Other times it was pointed: stories retold with a laugh that framed me as unstable, desperate, or pathetic, all wrapped in silk words and charming smiles.
I never rose to it.
I didn’t interrupt. Didn’t snap. Didn’t cry in public.
I smiled. I nodded. I let the words slide over me like rain over glass.
Inside, though, something cracked a little more each time.
The worst of it happened at a fundraiser dinner held in a restored opera house. The kind of place where history hung heavy in the air and everyone pretended to be cultured. Loretta cornered me near a group of socialites, her voice sweet, eyes sharp.
“You always were good at playing the victim,” she said lightly. “Even as kids. Remember how you used to cry when Mom scolded you? I suppose you just… grew into it.”
A few women laughed uncomfortably.
I felt my face burn, but I didn’t react. I excused myself politely, my hands shaking, and walked calmly and steadily toward the bathrooms.
The moment I locked myself into a stall, the composure shattered.
I pressed my fist to my mouth to keep from sobbing aloud. My chest hurt. My throat burned. I cried quietly, desperately, like if I didn’t let it out right then, I might suffocate.
After a few minutes, I washed my face, reapplied my makeup with practiced precision, and stepped back out.
Two women stood near the mirrors. They fell silent when they saw me.
Their expressions weren’t cruel. If anything, they looked… concerned.
I nodded once and walked past them with my chin lifted.
The next morning, everything changed.
I woke to my phone buzzing incessantly. Notifications stacked on top of notifications. Headlines. Messages. Missed calls.
Loretta Blackwood Accused of Bullying Sister in Public Events
Mean Girl or Misunderstood? Past Allegations Resurface
Videos Surface Showing Loretta’s Pattern of Public Cruelty
My heart pounded as I scrolled.
Clips circulated of Loretta snapping at servers, belittling assistants, mocking fans who approached her for photos. Old acquaintances came forward, stories piling up about her temper, her need to humiliate others to feel powerful.
Commentators praised my “grace” and “composure.”
Some called me dignified.
Others still blamed me.
She still stole her sister’s man.
Doesn’t matter if Loretta’s mean, Hannah started it.
The internet was ruthless, incapable of holding more than one truth at a time.
My fingers trembled as I dialed Loretta’s number.
Straight to voicemail.
I tried again. Then again.
Blocked.
Panic crept in, sharp and unwelcome.
I tried Timothy next.
No answer.
I checked the house. His side of it remained untouched, cold and unused, like he hadn’t been home in days. Which, come to think of it, he hadn’t.
That night, we attended another event. Loretta wasn’t there.
Nor the next one.
Whispers circulated. Questions multiplied.
Then a grainy video surfaced online: a masked woman, unmistakably Loretta despite the hat and sunglasses, boarding a private jet at one of our family hangars.
My stomach dropped.
I called my parents.
Once. Twice. Five times.
They finally answered.
“What?” my mother said sharply.
“Where’s Loretta?” I asked, my voice already breaking. “Why is she…why is there footage of her at the hangar?”
There was a pause.
Then my father spoke, his tone clipped and cold. “She’s left the country.”
“What?” I whispered. “Why? Is she okay?”
“This situation has escalated beyond control,” he said. “Her presence was complicating things.”
“Complicating…?” I echoed.
“Your marriage,” my mother cut in. “The image we worked so hard to construct. Loretta was becoming a liability.”
My chest tightened painfully. “You sent her away?”
“For her own good,” my father said. “And for yours. Until things die down.”
“Where did she go?” I asked desperately. “Please. I need to know.”
“That’s not your concern,” my mother snapped. “And don’t call us again.”
The line went dead.
I stared at my phone long after the screen went dark.
Something hollow opened inside my chest, vast and echoing.
Loretta hated me. I knew that. But she was still my sister.
And now she was gone.
Exiled for the sake of optics.
Sacrificed for an image I never asked for.
I sank onto the edge of my bed, my hands limp in my lap, feeling unbearably small.