Years later I came back and saw my twin sister covered in bruises in her own home. My name is Simone Mitchell. I’m forty‑two years old, and fifteen years ago I made a choice I thought would save my sister’s life.
Instead, it almost destroyed her.
I had just walked into my twin sister’s home after a decade and a half abroad, and I found her on her knees—not in prayer, not by choice. She was scrubbing the grout between marble tiles with a toothbrush‑sized brush, her shoulders hunched, her body folded in on itself.
Her hands were covered in dark, ugly bruises that looked like fingerprints. Like someone had grabbed her with the kind of force that breaks bones.
Her face—God.
Her face. When she turned and saw me, it wasn’t relief in her eyes. It was terror.
Pure, primal animal terror.
And it wasn’t for herself. It was for me.
What I did after that moment would destroy an empire. But before I tell you what happened next, I need you to understand where this story really begins.
Not fifteen years ago when I left.
Not even when Jasmine met Damian. This story begins when I was seven years old, holding my identical twin sister’s hand in a hospital waiting room somewhere in upstate New York, while our father told us our mother wasn’t coming home. Jasmine and I were born into poverty.
Real poverty.
The kind where you count coins for milk and your mother works three jobs just to keep the lights on in a cramped apartment above a laundromat. Our mother did everything she could to protect us, to give us even the smallest sense of normalcy in a life that was anything but normal.
She’d read us stories at night by candlelight when the electricity got cut off. She’d braid our hair the same way so nobody could tell us apart, and she’d laugh and say, “You two are my greatest masterpiece.
You’re worth more than all the money in the world.”
But money matters.
Money matters so much more than anyone wants to admit. When she got sick, there was no insurance, no safety net, just medical bills that grew like a cancer, eating away at what little we had. She died when we were fifteen.
Jasmine and I were standing on opposite sides of her hospital bed, each holding one of her hands when she took her last breath.
That’s when I made myself a promise. I would never be poor again.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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