The Credit Cards In My Name Exposed My Mother's Real Betrayal-lequyen994 - Chainityai

The Credit Cards In My Name Exposed My Mother’s Real Betrayal-lequyen994

For the first month after Laya Bennett moved into my mother’s house, I thought the adoption had given my mother a reason to wake up smiling again.

Mom had been lonely since Dad died, the kind of lonely that turned every phone call into a small performance of how empty her evenings were.

Laya was seventeen and about to age out of foster care, and when Mom called her a miraculous blessing, I wanted to believe it.

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I helped with the adoption fees because I thought a home could be the difference between a young woman surviving and being swallowed by the world.

I did not know I was helping build a stage.

The first requests sounded harmless.

Laya needed school clothes.

Then she needed a laptop.

Then a new phone.

Then dance classes, private lessons, spa weekends, spending money, and little emergencies that always arrived with Mom crying into the receiver.

Mom knew exactly which bruise to press.

She said Laya had never had anything nice.

She said I had been lucky.

She said family meant showing up.

I kept paying because guilt is not loud at first.

It comes dressed as decency.

By Christmas, the tree at Mom’s house was packed with presents, every single one for Laya.

Mom had not bought me a card.

When I asked, she said she did not want Laya to feel less special by watching me receive anything too.

That was the first time I saw how easily my mother could erase me and call it kindness.

In January, Mom called about tuition for a private college.

I told her I was saving for a house.

She said Laya’s future mattered more than my comfort.

I said Laya was her adopted daughter, not mine.

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