Friends who used to laugh around her started avoiding her calls.

People who once praised her confidence now called her a problem behind her back.

Cynthia tried to act like she didn’t care.

But she cared.

She cared when she started sitting alone in places where she used to arrive with noise.

She cared when her name stopped opening doors.

She cared when she saw online whispers and side comments that didn’t mention her name, but somehow still described her perfectly.

And the worst cut came from William.

Not because he shouted.

William never needed to shout.

He simply moved on.

One day, Cynthia saw pictures William stepping out with another woman, calm and relaxed, like a man who had removed a burden from his life.

Cynthia cried that night until her eyes swelled.

Not because she felt truly sorry for what she did, but because she hated losing.

Because she could not accept that one poor waitress had become the turning point of her life.

And even after everything, Cynthia still didn’t change inside.

She still looked down on the poor.

She still believed some people were beneath her.

She didn’t want to associate with Alice, not even in her mind.

She told herself it was disrespect that ruined her life, not her own wickedness.

But life did not agree with her excuses.

Life simply moved on without her.

Back in the rehab suite, Alice stood up slowly and wiped her face.

Her father held her hand again like he was afraid she would disappear.

Alice smiled at him.

She looked at her mother.

Then she looked out the window at the morning light.

She remembered the dining lounge, the scuffed shoes, the tight uniform, the way people called her you there, the way she used to feel like air.

And she said the truth softly as if sealing it in her heart.

I was invisible once, Alice said.

But not anymore.

 

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