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Chapter 6 - THE DAY I LOOKED LIKE SOMEONE

> I thought it was just a day out.

My mother said her friends wanted to take me shopping.

Nothing unusual. Just… go along.

I was picked up and taken to her workplace.

Then came the car — big, dark, filled with four men.

Strangers, yes. But one of them…

He looked like me.

For the first time in my life, I saw someone and thought: Maybe this is where my face comes from.

---

Before they arrived, my mom pulled me aside and told me something strange.

> "If they ask, tell them you go to [insert elite school here]."

A school I'd never even walked past.

I didn't ask why. I just nodded. Because that's what daughters do when they're used to playing along.

---

In the car, the man sat beside me like I was already his.

> "What kind of food do you like?"

"Do you watch TV? I like those shows too."

"So smart, eh? Skipped a class? Just like your father. Like daughter, like father."

That line made my stomach flip.

It didn't fit in the way compliments should.

But I smiled anyway. Polite. Unsure.

He told the others I was brilliant. That if they had daughters, they'd be lucky to have one like me.

And for a minute, I felt something warm.

Wanted. Not tolerated. Not handled. Not pitied.

Just… wanted.

---

Then came the stop.

A small clinic. They said it would be quick.

Inside, they gently asked me to open my mouth.

A soft stick. Swab. Swipe.

No needles. No pain.

Just a quiet, strange moment I didn't understand.

It wasn't until I was fifteen — watching a show on TV — that I realized:

> It was a DNA test.

I had been tested. Measured. Checked.

But the part that stayed with me most?

After it was done, as we walked out, that man leaned toward me and said:

> "Never tell your mother what we did today. Not ever."

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> I was a little girl asked to lie to strangers.

Then told to keep quiet about a truth I didn't even know yet.

A lie before.

A silence after.

And no one ever thought to ask how that would settle in a child's heart.

---

I still haven't told her.

Not my mom. Not anyone. Until now.

Maybe because even now, I don't know what hurts more:

That he made me feel special before I even knew what he wanted to confirm.

Or that after it all, no one thought I deserved the truth.

---

> Some days I wonder —

What would have happened if I said something that day?

Would my mom have been angry?

Would the lie have crumbled?

Would I have been allowed to choose which version of love I wanted?

But I didn't speak.

Because no one ever really gave me permission to use my voice.

Only to lie.

Or to stay quiet.

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