The Lottery Heiress I Cut Off My Mother and Exposed Her Lies LiveChapter 1
My mother had face blindness—she could never tell me apart from my younger sister.
Every time Penelope Fox got in trouble, I was the one who got beaten.
Senior year of high school, I ranked first in our entire school. Penelope ranked second to last. My mother strung me up and beat me for a day and a night.
I told myself she was sick. So I swallowed every grievance, every bruise, every scream that wanted to claw its way out of my throat.
Until three years into my first job, when I won fifty million dollars in the lottery. My first thought—my only thought—was to take my mother to the city to finally get her treated.
That's when I heard her talking to Penelope through the door.
"Penelope, I heard our neighborhood's getting redeveloped. I've already transferred the house into your name."
"All these years I've been faking the face blindness, giving you everything good. Whatever you do, don't let your sister find out."
I stood frozen outside that door, ice spreading through my chest.
So my mother wasn't face-blind after all.
She just loved Penelope more.
1.
For as long as I could remember, my mother called me by my sister's name.
Whenever Penelope broke a rule, Mother would storm over claiming she needed to "teach Penelope a lesson"—then beat me until I couldn't stand.
Whenever I brought home good grades, she'd announce she was "rewarding Corinne Fox"—then buy Penelope new clothes and toys.
When I was six, Penelope shattered the only memento our father left behind.
My mother came at me with red-rimmed eyes, feather duster raised, striking over and over until my vision blurred.
I sobbed through the blows, crying that it wasn't me, it wasn't me.
But she said we looked too alike. She couldn't tell us apart.
We looked nothing alike.
Penelope took after our mother—almond-shaped eyes, naturally curly hair that tumbled past her shoulders.
I took after our father—round eyes, straight black hair.
But my mother insisted she couldn't see the difference.
Senior year, I ranked first in the school.
Penelope ranked second from the bottom.
I came home that day glowing, certain—finally—that my mother would praise me.
Instead, she tied me to the ceiling beam and beat me through the night.
She said I was worthless. That ranking at the bottom of the class was a disgrace to our family.