Chapter 2: Just Another Pretty Pawn
My dad is something else.
He never married—just cycled through girlfriends like fantasy football picks—and has enough kids to field a Little League team.
I’m number seven—not too high, not too low.
Seven out of who knows how many. Like a worn ball cap in a row of hand-me-downs, just another addition to the crowd. Sometimes I think Dad keeps a running scoreboard just to keep track.
Originally, I was just another daughter, barely noticeable, but I happened to be pretty.
My mom is a minor actress, not too bad herself.
But I outdid them both, inheriting all the best genes—so attractive that I got scouted for modeling so often, I started carrying business cards just to hand them back.
Ever since I was a kid, my drawer overflowed with candy and scribbled notes from admirers.
My admirers could fill a Yankees game, and even the teachers gossiped about who left notes in my locker.
Honestly, it was a hassle—how was I supposed to get them to give up?
Sometimes it felt like walking through a crowd where everyone wore my name on their shirts, like a never-ending pep rally I never wanted. Even teachers would ask about my latest admirers, like it was small-town news.
Before I could figure it out, something even bigger happened.
My dad’s company hit a financial crisis.
To get out of it, my dad used his so-called brilliant brain—slicker than a new bowling ball—to come up with a genius plan.
—Send me to some big shot in Chicago.
Even worse, since I looked good, the big shot was very satisfied.
With a wave of his hand, my dad’s company was saved.
Dad was happy, the big shot was happy.
Only I wasn’t.
It felt like being auctioned off at a fancy steakhouse—everyone smiling but me.
And now, something even worse has happened to me.
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