My Stepfather Left Me His $640K Estate While My Mom and Stepsister Got $5K Each – What They Did When the Will Was Read Shockedd Me

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My stepfather never called me his daughter. I spent years being the “invisible and unwanted” child in my own family. When he died, he bequeathed his $640K estate to me while leaving my mom and stepsister just $5K each.

The reason and their reaction shocked me more than the inheritance did. My name is Lucy. I grew up as the unwanted puzzle piece.

Mom had me at 19 from a marriage that lasted about as long as a summer storm. When I turned five, she married Mark. A year later, my half-sister, Ava, came along.

I thought I was gaining a stepfather and a sister. What I got was a front-row seat to being forgotten. Mark never hugged me.

Never said he loved me. Never called me his daughter. I was just “Lucy” or sometimes “your kid” when he talked to Mom about me.

But he wasn’t cruel either. He paid for things. Put food on the table.

And he made sure I had what I needed. “Lucy, dinner’s ready,” Mom would call. “Coming, Mom.”

Mark would look up from his newspaper.

His eyes would pass right through me like I was some furniture. On the other hand, Ava was different. She was his little princess.

The golden child, you know. His face would light up when she ran into the room. I watched the way he loved her and wondered what was so wrong with me.

“Daddy, look what I drew!”

“That’s beautiful, sweetheart. You’re so talented!” Mark would chirp. I used to draw pictures too.

They ended up on the refrigerator for exactly two days before disappearing into the trash. “Why doesn’t Mark like me?” I asked Mom once when I was eight. She looked uncomfortable.

“He likes you fine, honey. He’s just not good with emotions.”

***

The years passed like that. Me trying to earn scraps of attention.

Ava getting showered with love. It hurt me. Like so much.

But I let it go. I understood. I didn’t matter.

I learned to live with it. But no matter how much I tried to shrink myself, the pain always stayed the same size. I studied hard, stayed out of trouble, and helped with chores without being asked.

I thought maybe if I was perfect enough, he’d see me. When I graduated high school as valedictorian, Mark nodded once. “Good job!” He said.

That’s all. When Ava got a B-plus on a spelling test, he took her out for ice cream and pizza. It was like my achievements came with invisible ink… seen by no one and celebrated by no one.

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