The conversation that followed was not cinematic. No perfect reconciliation. No dramatic collapse into each other’s arms. My mother apologized fully for the first time—really apologized, not for confusion or misunderstanding, but for abandoning me when I needed her most. Tom did too, though haltingly, like the words had to fight through years of pride to get out. Serena never truly apologized; she said she was sorry “things got so out of hand,” which told me everything I needed to know.

So the ending was logical.

I forgave my parents enough to stop carrying them like a wound, but not enough to pretend the past had been smaller than it was. We rebuilt something limited, careful, and honest over time—phone calls, occasional visits, no lies. Serena and I did not rebuild. Some betrayals are too deliberate to become sisterhood again.

Aunt Diane remained my anchor. When I started graduate school that fall, I listed her as my emergency contact without hesitation. Two years later, when I clerked in Washington, she was still the first person I called with good news and the first one I called when life turned hard. Not because biology failed. Because love proved itself.