“What happened to you?” Mira asked, her voice cracking.
“No,” Mira snapped. “It’s mine.” tall younger sister story
“Probably.”
Lena grinned. “You want to borrow my platform boots for the party next week?” “What happened to you
“I was just asking,” Lena said, her voice soft. But Mira saw the flash of hurt. Then came the thing Mira couldn’t take back. “You think just because you’re taller now, you get everything? You get the height, the attention, the easy laugh? You’re still the little sister, Lena. Stop pretending you’re not.” “You want to borrow my platform boots for
On the fourth night, Mira found a note on her pillow. It was written on a torn piece of notebook paper in Lena’s loopy, still-messy handwriting. Mira, I didn’t ask to be tall. You didn’t ask to stop growing. I’m sorry the world looks different from up here. But I miss when you used to walk beside me, not behind me. I don’t want to be your rival. I want to be your sister. Can we please just be sisters again? — Lena Mira read the note three times. Then she did something she hadn’t done since she was twelve. She cried. Not for the lost inches, but for the lost weeks. She had turned her sister into a monument of her own insecurity. Lena hadn’t stolen the height. The world had simply kept spinning.
“What happened to you?” Mira asked, her voice cracking.
“No,” Mira snapped. “It’s mine.”
“Probably.”
Lena grinned. “You want to borrow my platform boots for the party next week?”
“I was just asking,” Lena said, her voice soft. But Mira saw the flash of hurt. Then came the thing Mira couldn’t take back. “You think just because you’re taller now, you get everything? You get the height, the attention, the easy laugh? You’re still the little sister, Lena. Stop pretending you’re not.”
On the fourth night, Mira found a note on her pillow. It was written on a torn piece of notebook paper in Lena’s loopy, still-messy handwriting. Mira, I didn’t ask to be tall. You didn’t ask to stop growing. I’m sorry the world looks different from up here. But I miss when you used to walk beside me, not behind me. I don’t want to be your rival. I want to be your sister. Can we please just be sisters again? — Lena Mira read the note three times. Then she did something she hadn’t done since she was twelve. She cried. Not for the lost inches, but for the lost weeks. She had turned her sister into a monument of her own insecurity. Lena hadn’t stolen the height. The world had simply kept spinning.