I Was the Family Scapegoat
470 Views · Ongoing · Agatha Christie
They said I killed them all.
My father. My daughter. My brother's legs. One explosion, one moment of selfishness, and I became the family murderer.
My husband Dominic—the most feared mafia boss in the city—drowned himself in whiskey. I drowned myself in something worse.
Three years on the pole. Three years with strangers' cash stuffed in my bra, their cocks shoved down my throat, their fists in back alleys, their cameras catching every degradation. Three years swallowing cum and shame to scrape together half a million for my brother's surgery.
Then the doctors found the tumor. Three months left.
One last show, I told myself. A blindfolded performance. Enough to pay off Ethan's debt before I died.
That's when someone ripped off my blindfold.
Dominic.
Behind him stood my very-alive father. And Ethan—on two perfect legs, kicking aside an empty wheelchair. And my adopted sister Vanessa, draped over my husband, flashing a diamond ring.
This whole performance? Her birthday present.
"Surprise, sweetheart." Dominic smiled. "The explosion was fake. We just needed to put you in your place."
Ethan laughed. "Three years of stripper money made one hell of a party, sis."
My father still wouldn't look at me. "Learn to treat Vanessa right, or you're no daughter of mine."
The room exploded in laughter.
I stood there, diagnosis crumpled in my fist.
The explosion was fake. The crippled legs were fake. Everything was fake.
But the cancer eating my brain?
That was real.
My father. My daughter. My brother's legs. One explosion, one moment of selfishness, and I became the family murderer.
My husband Dominic—the most feared mafia boss in the city—drowned himself in whiskey. I drowned myself in something worse.
Three years on the pole. Three years with strangers' cash stuffed in my bra, their cocks shoved down my throat, their fists in back alleys, their cameras catching every degradation. Three years swallowing cum and shame to scrape together half a million for my brother's surgery.
Then the doctors found the tumor. Three months left.
One last show, I told myself. A blindfolded performance. Enough to pay off Ethan's debt before I died.
That's when someone ripped off my blindfold.
Dominic.
Behind him stood my very-alive father. And Ethan—on two perfect legs, kicking aside an empty wheelchair. And my adopted sister Vanessa, draped over my husband, flashing a diamond ring.
This whole performance? Her birthday present.
"Surprise, sweetheart." Dominic smiled. "The explosion was fake. We just needed to put you in your place."
Ethan laughed. "Three years of stripper money made one hell of a party, sis."
My father still wouldn't look at me. "Learn to treat Vanessa right, or you're no daughter of mine."
The room exploded in laughter.
I stood there, diagnosis crumpled in my fist.
The explosion was fake. The crippled legs were fake. Everything was fake.
But the cancer eating my brain?
That was real.















































