PART 7 — “Autumn Hid The Shampoo Bottles”
The first time I used the bathroom inside the mansion, I accidentally hid the shampoo bottles afterward.|
Not stole them.
Hid them.
Because they looked too expensive to leave sitting out after I touched them.
That was the moment I realized something humiliating:
poverty doesn’t leave your body immediately just because you entered a rich house.
The bathroom alone was larger than our entire kitchen back home. White marble counters. Heated floors. Towels softer than any blanket I’d ever owned.
I stood there staring at myself in the giant mirror wearing borrowed pajamas Gael had thrown at me the night before because “you can’t sleep in jeans like a fugitive.”
The pajamas probably cost more than my entire suitcase.
My plaid plastic tote bag sat in the corner beside the bathtub looking painfully out of place.
Honestly?
It made me feel better seeing it there.
Like one object in the room still understood me.
I carefully moved the shampoo bottles back exactly where they had been before using them.
Then moved them again.
Then finally gave up because I couldn’t remember the original angle.
“Autumn?”
I nearly jumped out of my skin.
Gael’s voice echoed from outside the bathroom door.
“You alive in there?”
“Yes!”
A pause.
Then:
“You’ve been in there forty minutes.”
Heat flooded my face immediately.
I opened the door slowly.
Gael leaned casually against the hallway wall wearing sweatpants and messy blond hair while scrolling through something on his phone.
Millions of followers online.
Most famous streamer in the country.
And somehow he still looked like a little brother waiting to annoy someone before breakfast.
His eyes immediately dropped toward my hands.
“You okay?”
I realized I was still clutching one of the towels nervously.
“I think I used the wrong bathroom.”
Gael blinked.
“What?”
“This one looks important.”
The streamer stared at me for two full seconds.
Then burst out laughing so hard he had to lean against the wall.
I felt instantly ashamed.
“Sorry.”
That made him stop immediately.
Not the explanation.
The apology.
Gael’s expression softened fast.
“No, no, hey.”
He rubbed one hand over his face.
“That’s not—”
Another tiny laugh escaped him.
“There isn’t a dangerous bathroom, Autumn.”
I looked unconvinced.
“There absolutely are dangerous bathrooms.”
That nearly made him laugh again.
Instead, he gently took the towel from my hands and pointed down the hallway.
“Come on.”
A grin.
“Adrian’s already terrifying the kitchen staff by reorganizing fruit.”
“What?”
“You’ll see.”
The mansion hallways felt endless in the morning light.
Every room looked staged somehow.
Perfect.
Quiet.
Expensive enough to make breathing feel risky.
I walked carefully beside Gael while trying not to stare openly at everything.
The floors.
The paintings.
The giant windows overlooking the city skyline.
Back home, our house shook when trucks drove past too quickly.
Here, even silence sounded wealthy.
Gael suddenly looked sideways at me.
“You know you don’t have to walk like that, right?”
I froze immediately.
“Like what?”
“Like you’re scared of breaking the air.”
The sentence hit me directly in the chest.
Because somehow—
after less than twenty-four hours—
he already noticed.
I looked down quickly.
“I just don’t know how to be here.”
Gael stayed quiet for a second.
Then softly answered:
“Honestly?”
A small shrug.
“Neither do we sometimes.”
That surprised me enough to finally look at him properly.
And for the very first time since arriving in New York—
one tiny piece of fear loosened inside my chest.
PART 8 — “Autumn Didn’t Know Which Fork To Touch”
The first breakfast nearly killed me.
Not emotionally.
Physically.
Because the table had seven different forks.
Seven.
I stood frozen beside the dining chair staring down at enough silverware to perform surgery while sunlight poured through massive floor-to-ceiling windows behind me.
The dining room looked unreal in the morning.
Fresh flowers.
White linen.
Quiet staff moving gracefully between tables.
Back home, breakfast usually meant toast over the sink because the kitchen chairs wobbled too much.
Gael dropped into the chair beside mine wearing a hoodie worth more than my entire hometown and immediately started pouring cereal into a coffee mug.
That made me feel slightly better.
Adrian sat at the far end of the table reading financial reports on a tablet while drinking espresso like someone preparing to fire entire corporations before noon.
And Leonardo—
the movie star—
walked in wearing gray sweatpants and messy curls while somehow still looking offensively beautiful.
Honestly?
It felt illegal.
Then I realized everyone was waiting for me to sit down.
Panic arrived immediately.
I sat carefully.
Too carefully.
Like the chair might reject me personally.
A woman in a black uniform approached politely.
“Miss Song, would you like tea or coffee?”
Miss Song.
Nobody had ever called me that before.
I almost looked behind myself.
“Tea is fine.”
She smiled warmly and walked away.
I leaned slightly toward Gael and whispered:
“Which fork do I use first?”
The streamer looked down at the table.
Then at me.
Then immediately grabbed the largest fork and started eating fruit with it dramatically.
“This one.”
Adrian didn’t even look up from his tablet.
“That’s the seafood fork.”
Gael shrugged.
“Seafood deserves flexibility.”
I laughed accidentally.
Tiny sound.
But real.
All three brothers looked toward me immediately.
And suddenly I understood something horrifying:
they were all watching me constantly.
Not in a controlling way.
In a scared way.
Like they were terrified I might disappear if they looked away too long.
The tea arrived.
My hands wrapped around the warm cup automatically.
Comfort object.
Shield object.
Leonardo smiled softly across the table.
“You okay?”
I nodded too fast.
“Yes.”
A pause.
Then:
“This room is stressful.”
That made Gael choke on cereal immediately.
“The room?”
“There’s too much glass.”
I pointed weakly toward the giant windows.
“And too many forks.”
Another small gesture.
“And I think one of the waiters called me ma’am.”
Leonardo covered his mouth trying not to laugh.
Even Adrian’s expression shifted slightly.
Not quite smiling.
But close.
Gael leaned toward me dramatically.
“Autumn.”
He lowered his voice.
“I need you to know something important.”
“What?”
“Nobody here knows which fork to use either.”
“That is absolutely not true.”
Adrian finally looked up from the tablet.
Completely calm.
“I googled it once before a charity dinner.”
I stared at him.
“The billionaire hedge fund CEO?”
“Yes.”
Leonardo lifted his coffee cup casually.
“I still copy other people at formal events.”
Gael pointed at himself proudly.
“I fully panic every time and pray rich people move first.”
I blinked slowly at all three of them.
And for the first time since entering the mansion—
the brothers stopped looking untouchable.
Suddenly they just looked like people trying very hard to make me comfortable inside a world that still scared all of us in different ways.
PART 9 — “Leonardo Bought The Wrong Toothbrush”
I found the toothbrushes lined up on the bathroom counter that night.
Not one toothbrush.
Five.
Five completely unopened toothbrushes in different colors and brands arranged neatly beside the sink like someone preparing for a dental emergency.
I stood there staring at them in confusion while warm light reflected off marble counters big enough to sleep on.
Then I noticed the sticky note.
Didn’t know which kind you liked.
— Leonardo
I actually laughed out loud.
Because somehow the famous movie star with millions of fans had apparently panic-purchased an entire toothbrush collection for his long-lost sister.
The bathroom door suddenly opened behind me.
I nearly screamed.
Leonardo froze immediately.
“Oh my God, sorry.”
One hand still on the door.
Messy curls.
Reading glasses sliding slightly down his nose.
It was deeply unfair that he looked cinematic even while apologizing.
I pointed slowly toward the toothbrush lineup.
“What is this?”
His face changed instantly.
Not embarrassment exactly.
Guilt.
“I didn’t know what brand you use.”
I blinked.
“So you bought all of them?”
A pause.
Then quietly:
“…yes.”
The silence lasted three full seconds before I burst out laughing again.
Not polite laughing.
Real laughing.
The kind that sneaks out before you can stop it.
Leonardo looked shocked at first.
Then relieved.
Then suddenly he started laughing too.
“I haven’t bought toothpaste in ten years,” he admitted.
“I accidentally spent forty dollars on mouthwash.”
“What kind of mouthwash costs forty dollars?”
“The terrifying kind in glass bottles.”
That nearly killed me.
I leaned against the bathroom counter laughing while the actor rubbed tiredly at his eyes like he still couldn’t believe this conversation was real.
Then the laughter softened slowly.
And something quieter settled into the room.
Leonardo looked down at the toothbrushes.
“I know this probably feels overwhelming.”
I stayed quiet.
Because overwhelming wasn’t even the correct word anymore.
It felt like walking into someone else’s dream while still wearing your old life on your sleeves.
Leonardo leaned carefully against the doorway.
“When Adrian got the call from the police station…”
A pause.
“…he thought someone was trying to scam us.”
That made sense honestly.
I looked down at the sticky note again.
“So why did you come?”
Leonardo’s expression changed immediately.
Not celebrity anymore.
Not polished.
Just grief.
“Because Mom spent twenty years talking about a little sister she couldn’t bring home.”
The room went completely still.
Warm bathroom lights.
Expensive marble.
Five toothbrushes sitting silently beside the sink.
And suddenly none of it felt luxurious anymore.
Just sad.
Leonardo swallowed hard.
“She mailed us your school pictures every year.”
A weak smile touched his mouth.
“Gael used to fight us for copies.”
I felt my chest tighten painfully.
“You really knew about me.”
“All of us did.”
The words shattered something inside me quietly.
Because my entire life,
I thought I was the forgotten child.
But somewhere across the country—
inside mansions,
movie sets,
streaming rooms,
board meetings—
three brothers had apparently been carrying pieces of me the whole time without ever meeting me.
I sat slowly on the edge of the bathtub.
Then softly admitted the thing hurting most:
“I used to wonder why nobody came for us.”
Leonardo closed his eyes briefly.
The answer already lived inside him somewhere painful.
When he finally spoke,
his voice sounded exhausted.
“We were children too, Autumn.”
That sentence broke my heart completely.
Because suddenly I stopped imagining powerful rich brothers who abandoned us.
And instead saw:
three boys trapped inside the exact same family machine that destroyed our mother.
PART 10 — “Adrian Kept Checking If I Ate”
I didn’t notice it at first.
The water bottles appearing beside me.
The fruit already cut before I asked.
The silent way someone always seemed to place food near me whenever I stayed too quiet for too long.
At first I thought the staff was just extremely attentive.
Then one afternoon, I realized it was Adrian.
Specifically Adrian.
Which honestly shocked me because he still acted emotionally constipated ninety percent of the time.
The realization happened in the library.
A real library.
Two floors.
Rolling ladders.
Dark wood shelves stretching all the way to the ceiling.
I had been hiding there for almost an hour pretending to read while secretly panicking over the fact that every book probably cost more than my bus ticket to New York.
Rain drifted softly outside the giant windows while I curled into one corner of the sofa wearing one of Gael’s oversized hoodies.
That was another strange thing.
My brothers kept leaving clothes outside my bedroom door like stray cats bringing gifts.
I heard footsteps approaching softly across the carpet.
Adrian.
Phone pressed to one ear.
Still in a suit.
Still looking like he managed international finance through pure intimidation alone.
He noticed me immediately.
Then—
without interrupting his business call—
he quietly placed a plate beside me.
Apple slices.
Crackers.
Cheese.
Then he walked away.
I stared at the plate.
Then at him.
Then back at the plate.
Ten minutes later, Gael flopped dramatically onto the sofa beside me holding a gaming controller.
“You finally noticed?”
I frowned.
“Noticed what?”
“The Adrian Thing.”
“The… Adrian Thing?”
Gael pointed toward the untouched snack plate.
“He keeps checking if you’ve eaten.”
I blinked slowly.
“What?”
The streamer leaned back against the sofa dramatically.
“Welcome to his trauma response.”
I stared at him in confusion.
Gael lowered his voice slightly.
“When we were kids, Mom skipped meals a lot.”
A pause.
“She always said she wasn’t hungry.”
Another pause.
“But Adrian noticed.”
Something tightened painfully in my chest.
I looked toward the far side of the library where Adrian still stood quietly arguing with someone through an earpiece while staring out at the rain.
Suddenly all the tiny moments replayed differently:
- asking if I wanted breakfast twice
- leaving tea outside my room
- sending snacks during long car rides
- watching my plate during dinner
Not control.
Worry.
Deep old worry.
Gael sighed softly beside me.
“He gets weird when people he loves don’t eat enough.”
The sentence hit me incredibly hard.
People he loves.
No hesitation.
No awkwardness.
As if somehow I had always belonged inside that category naturally.
I looked down at the plate again.
The apple slices had no skin on them.
I froze.
Because Mom used to peel apples exactly the same way for me growing up.
Tiny detail.
Tiny devastating detail.
I looked up sharply toward Adrian.
“He remembered that?”
Gael followed my gaze.
Then smiled softly.
“No.”
A pause.
“He does it for himself too.”
That somehow hurt even more.
Because suddenly I realized:
after our mother disappeared from their lives,
the brothers kept carrying pieces of her habits without even noticing.
Tiny survival rituals.
Tiny inherited tendernesses.
Across the library, Adrian finally ended his phone call.
He glanced toward me immediately.
Then toward the untouched plate.
His expression tightened almost invisibly.
“Don’t feel pressured,” he said calmly.
“I just thought you might be hungry.”
I looked down at the peeled apple slices again.
Then quietly picked one up.
And for the first time since arriving in New York—
eating in front of my brothers no longer felt like something I needed to apologize for.
PART 11 — “Gael Googled My Hometown At Three In The Morning”
I caught Gael researching my hometown like he was preparing for an FBI investigation.
At three-thirty in the morning.
I couldn’t sleep again.
The mansion was too quiet at night. Back home, you could always hear something:
old pipes,
dogs barking,
trucks passing,
neighbors yelling across fences.
Here, silence felt expensive.
So I wandered downstairs wearing fuzzy socks and one of Leonardo’s giant sweaters because apparently my brothers had collectively decided I owned no clothing anymore.
Light glowed faintly beneath the game room door.
I peeked inside.
Gael sat cross-legged on the couch surrounded by energy drink cans while three computer monitors lit up the dark room blue.
Typical streamer cave.
Except instead of gaming—
he was staring at satellite images of my hometown.
I blinked slowly.
“What are you doing?”
Gael screamed.
Actually screamed.
Then clutched his chest dramatically.
“Autumn!”
He pointed accusingly.
“You move around like a Victorian ghost.”
I looked toward the screens again.
Maps.
Street views.
Photos of my old grocery store.
“You’re stalking my town.”
The streamer immediately looked guilty.
Which somehow confirmed he absolutely was.
“I was curious.”
“At three in the morning?”
“That’s when curiosity becomes strongest.”
I walked farther into the room carefully.
One monitor displayed the tiny gas station near our house.
Another showed my old middle school.
And suddenly I realized something strange:
my worlds were touching each other for the first time.
That made my chest feel tight.
Gael rubbed the back of his neck awkwardly.
“I just kept trying to picture where you grew up.”
The honesty in his voice softened me immediately.
I sat beside him on the couch.
The giant room smelled faintly of electronics and instant ramen while rain tapped softly against the tall windows outside.
Gael pointed at one blurry street photo.
“Is that really the grocery store?”
I nodded.
“The owner gives people free bread when the truck deliveries are late.”
The streamer stared at the image quietly.
Then:
“You walked there?”
“Everybody walks there.”
Another pause.
“Your school really looked like this?”
I leaned closer.
The school photo online was terrible.
Gray building.
Cracked pavement.
Tiny playground.
“Yeah.”
Gael went strangely quiet afterward.
Not judgmental.
Sad.
And suddenly I understood:
my brothers had spent years imagining me abstractly.
A little sister somewhere far away.
But now reality existed:
- rusty bus stops
- broken sidewalks
- water shutting off twice a week
- winter jackets bought three sizes too big
Real life.
Not just photographs Mom mailed secretly.
Gael clicked another image.
The old community fair.
I laughed softly immediately.
“Oh my God.”
“What?”
“That ride injured six people.”
The streamer stared at me in horror.
“You had dangerous carnivals?”
“We had carnivals built by optimism and loose screws.”
That made him laugh so hard he nearly fell sideways off the couch.
Then he suddenly looked at me carefully.
“Were you lonely?”
The question arrived quietly.
Dangerously quietly.
I looked toward the rain-dark windows.
Then admitted the truth:
“I got used to it.”
Gael’s expression changed instantly.
Not pity.
Something worse.
Heartbreak.
Because people who grow up surrounded by love never realize how painful that sentence actually sounds until they hear someone say it casually.
The room fell silent except for distant rain and humming computer fans.
Then Gael quietly turned one monitor toward me.
It showed a saved folder.
Hundreds of images.
Every school photo Mom had apparently sent them over the years.
I stopped breathing for a second.
“You kept these?”
Gael looked confused.
“Of course we did.”
The folder titles hit me hardest:
- AUTUMN AGE 7
- AUTUMN SCHOOL PLAY
- AUTUMN BIRTHDAY
- AUTUMN FIRST DAY OF HIGH SCHOOL
Entire pieces of my life preserved secretly inside a mansion three states away.
I stared at the glowing screen through blurry eyes.
And somewhere deep inside me—
the abandoned little girl I used to be began understanding something terrifying and beautiful:
I had been missed long before I was found.
PART 12 — “Leonardo Found The Birthday Video”
The video was hidden inside an old hard drive nobody had touched in years.
Which honestly felt very on-brand for my family at this point.
Every emotional revelation apparently lived buried inside expensive technology.
Leonardo found it accidentally while searching for old vacation photos one rainy afternoon. I was curled up beside him on the living room couch while he scrolled through folders projected onto the massive television screen.
Gael lounged upside down in an armchair eating chips loudly enough to violate several international treaties.
And Adrian sat nearby pretending to work while very obviously listening to everything.
The mansion felt softer lately.
Still overwhelming.
Still impossibly luxurious.
But no longer cold.
Rain moved gently across the giant windows while jazz played quietly through hidden speakers somewhere in the ceiling.
Leonardo clicked another folder.
Then suddenly froze.
The room changed instantly.
“What?”
He didn’t answer.
Instead, he stared at the screen with an expression that looked almost frightened.
Gael sat upright immediately.
“Leo?”
Slowly, Leonardo clicked the file.
Static flickered briefly across the television.
Then—
Mom appeared on the screen.
I stopped breathing.
The video quality was terrible.
Grainy.
Old.
But it was her.
Younger.
Healthier.
Standing in a tiny kitchen I immediately recognized from childhood.
My childhood kitchen.
Rain hammered softly against the mansion windows while nobody in the room moved.
Mom smiled nervously at the camera.
“If you boys are watching this…”
A tiny laugh.
“…then Gael probably finally learned how computers work.”
“HEY,” Gael whispered defensively through tears already forming in his eyes.
Mom laughed again.
And suddenly the entire room shattered emotionally.
Because there she was.
Alive.
Warm.
Real.
Not hospital beds.
Not funeral flowers.
Not memories collapsing under grief.
Just Mom.
Standing in our old kitchen wearing her faded yellow cardigan.
Then she stepped sideways slightly.
And I saw myself.
Tiny little me.
Missing front teeth.
Holding a birthday cake almost crooked in my hands.
My stomach dropped completely.
Mom looked back toward the camera.
“Say hi to your brothers, Autumn.”
Little-me waved awkwardly at the screen.
“Hi brothers!”
Nobody in the mansion breathed.
The rain outside sounded impossibly loud suddenly.
Tiny little me grinned proudly.
“I turned seven!”
Then I whispered toward the camera conspiratorially:
“Mom says you’re rich but I still think cowboys are cooler.”
Gael made a sound somewhere between a laugh and a complete emotional collapse.
Leonardo covered his mouth instantly.
Even Adrian looked like somebody had punched directly through his ribs.
On-screen, Mom adjusted the camera slightly.
“I know I can’t send this yet.”
Her smile weakened.
“But maybe someday…”
The sentence trailed off unfinished.
That hurt most.
Because suddenly we were watching hope survive inside someone who probably already knew the world would crush it eventually.
Little-me kept talking excitedly into the camera.
About:
- birthday presents
- chickens
- school
- a frog I found outside
Ordinary little-girl things.
And somewhere behind me,
I heard Adrian quietly leave the room.
I turned automatically.
He never left rooms emotionally.
That frightened me enough to follow him.
I found him standing alone in the hallway near the windows overlooking the rain-dark city.
Still.
Silent.
Hands clenched tightly behind his back.
For several seconds neither of us spoke.
Then Adrian finally admitted something in a voice so quiet I almost missed it:
“I watched that video once when I was seventeen.”
I stared at him.
“What?”
His eyes stayed fixed on the rain outside.
“I found the file years ago.”
A pause.
“I watched it every birthday afterward.”
The confession hollowed me completely.
Because suddenly I understood:
while I grew up believing nobody remembered me—
my oldest brother had apparently spent years replaying a little girl waving through an old camera screen like she might disappear if he stopped watching.
PART 13 — “Adrian Never Deleted Her Number”
After the birthday video, the house became quieter for a few days.
Not awkward quiet.
Emotional quiet.
Like everyone was carrying something fragile around inside their chest and trying not to drop it accidentally.
I started noticing things more after that.
Tiny things.
Like how Leonardo lingered near family photographs longer than before.
How Gael suddenly stopped making jokes whenever Mom came up in conversation.
And Adrian—
Adrian started sleeping even less.
I noticed because I woke up at strange hours too.
Trauma apparently destroys everyone’s relationship with sleep equally, regardless of tax bracket.
One night around two in the morning, I wandered downstairs looking for tea and found Adrian alone in his office.
The room looked intimidating enough to launch wars from.
Dark wood.
Massive windows.
City skyline glowing outside.
He sat behind the desk wearing glasses while staring at a laptop screen with the exhausted expression of a man being emotionally hunted by spreadsheets.
He looked up immediately when I entered.
“You should be asleep.”
“You too.”
Fair point.
I moved toward the bookshelf slowly.
Even his office smelled expensive.
Coffee.
Leather.
Rain.
The silence between us wasn’t uncomfortable anymore.
Just careful.
Then I noticed the old phone sitting beside his laptop.
Not his current one.
An older model.
The screen lit briefly from a notification.
And I froze.
Because the contact name on the screen said:
Mom.
My chest tightened instantly.
Adrian noticed where I was looking.
For one brief second,
something vulnerable crossed his face.
Then he slowly picked up the old phone.
“I never changed it.”
His voice sounded quieter than usual.
I stepped closer carefully.
The wallpaper on the phone was ancient.
Blurry.
A photograph of Mom standing outside somewhere sunny while holding flowers.
“She used that phone number?”
Adrian nodded once.
I swallowed hard.
“But… she’s gone.”
“I know.”
The room fell silent.
Rain drifted softly against the giant office windows while traffic moved far below like rivers of light.
Then Adrian admitted something that completely shattered me:
“I still pay the phone bill.”
I stared at him.
“What?”
He looked embarrassed suddenly.
Actually embarrassed.
“I know it’s irrational.”
No.
No, it wasn’t.
It was grief.
The kind that leaves doors unlocked emotionally because part of you still can’t survive closing them completely.
Adrian looked down at the old phone in his hand.
“Every year on her birthday…”
A pause.
“…I send a message.”
My eyes filled immediately.
“What do you say?”
A long silence followed.
Then quietly:
“Mostly updates.”
A weak breath escaped him.
“About Gael being reckless.”
A pause.
“About Leonardo pretending he’s emotionally stable.”
Another pause.
“And eventually…”
His voice cracked almost invisibly.
“…about you.”
That nearly destroyed me on the spot.
Because suddenly I realized something devastating:
while Mom spent years talking about me to my brothers—
my brothers spent years talking about me back to her after she was already gone.
The grief inside this family had apparently been circling all of us long before we ever reunited.
I sat slowly in the chair across from his desk.
The city glowed endlessly outside while rain streaked silver across the glass.
Then softly I asked:
“Did you ever think we’d actually meet?”
Adrian stared at the old phone for a very long time.
Finally he answered honestly:
“No.”
A pause.
“But I couldn’t stop hoping anyway.”
The confession settled heavily into the office.
Not dramatic.
Not cinematic.
Just heartbreakingly human.
Then the old phone screen dimmed slowly between his hands.
And suddenly I understood something important about my oldest brother:
Adrian wasn’t cold.
He was simply the kind of person who kept loving people long after the world gave him permission to stop.
PART 14 — “Gael Accidentally Called Me His Sister On Stream”
It happened in front of six million people.
Completely by accident.
Which somehow made it worse.
Or better.
Honestly, I still don’t know.
Gael had convinced me to sit in the background during one of his livestreams because, according to him:
“The internet already thinks I live alone with raccoons.”
I didn’t fully understand what that meant, but apparently his viewers had developed elaborate conspiracy theories about his lifestyle.
So now I sat curled up on the massive game room couch wearing an oversized hoodie while trying very hard not to look directly at the cameras.
The streaming setup looked like a spaceship.
Multiple monitors.
Bright lights.
Moving chat windows flying so fast they looked alive.
Thousands upon thousands of comments poured across the screens every second.
I wanted to throw up.
Gael noticed immediately.
“You okay?”
“There are too many humans.”
He grinned.
“That’s just the internet.”
A pause.
“Never trust it emotionally.”
Excellent advice honestly.
The livestream continued while he played some loud multiplayer game and insulted twelve-year-olds professionally for a living.
Apparently that was his career.
Every few minutes he glanced toward me casually.
Checking.
Always checking.
I still wasn’t used to that.
Then halfway through the stream, one of the viewers donated money to ask:
WHO IS THE MYSTERY GIRL???
The chat exploded instantly.
NEW GIRL???
IS THAT HIS GIRLFRIEND???
SHE LOOKS SHY 😭
IS SHE LOST???
PROTECT HER IMMEDIATELY
I nearly died.
“Gael,” I whispered urgently.
“They’re perceiving me.”
That made him laugh so hard he accidentally lost the match.
The chat somehow became worse afterward.
Then another donation appeared:
BLINK TWICE IF SHE NEEDS HELP
Gael wiped tears from laughing.
“She’s fine, chat.”
He pointed toward me casually.
“She’s just overwhelmed because she’s my sister and all of you are terrifying.”
Silence.
Not in the room.
On the stream.
The chat froze so abruptly it genuinely looked broken.
Gael froze too.
“Oh.”
I blinked slowly.
The streamer stared at the monitor.
Then at me.
Then back at the monitor where messages suddenly exploded so violently they became unreadable.
WAIT WHAT
SISTER???
HE HAS A SISTER???
IS THIS REAL???
OH MY GOD
SHE LOOKS LIKE HIM
NO SHE LOOKS LIKE ADRIAN
WAIT—
THEY HAVE A SISTER???
Gael slowly removed his headset.
“Well.”
A pause.
“I may have committed an internet.”
I started laughing immediately.
Not nervous laughing.
Real laughing.
Because the pure horror on his face was honestly incredible.
The game room door suddenly burst open.
Leonardo walked in holding his phone dramatically.
“YOU TOLD SIX MILLION PEOPLE?”
“I DIDN’T MEAN TO.”
Adrian appeared behind him somehow already looking exhausted.
Which meant he probably learned about this from:
- publicists
- investors
- lawyers
- or possibly the President
Gael pointed accusingly at the chat.
“They emotionally ambushed me.”
“You’re a professional streamer,” Adrian said flatly.
“Your entire career is talking.”
The chat continued detonating behind them.
Meanwhile I sat curled into the couch trying not to laugh myself unconscious while millions of strangers apparently discovered I existed in real time.
Then suddenly—
amid all the chaos—
one comment moved slowly across the screen:
she looks happy there
The room softened instantly.
Because somehow,
beneath all the internet insanity,
that stranger noticed the real thing.
I looked toward my brothers:
- Gael panicking dramatically
- Leonardo arguing with publicists through text
- Adrian already preparing damage control emotionally before speaking
Chaos.
Ridiculous chaos.
But warm chaos.
Family chaos.
And for the very first time since arriving in New York—
being publicly connected to someone no longer felt frightening.
It felt like belonging………..