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For ten years, my roommate told me who I was. Today, my identical twin sister walked into my bakery and proved every single word was a terrifying lie. 😳🧁 Who do you trust when your entire life is someone else’s fiction?

The bell above the door chimed. I wiped flour off my apron and looked up, offering my standard customer-service smile. But the greeting died in my throat. The woman staring back at me across the…

For ten years, my roommate told me who I was. Today, my identical twin sister walked into my bakery and proved every single word was a terrifying lie. 😳🧁 Who do you trust when your entire life is someone else’s fiction?
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The bell above the door chimed. I wiped flour off my apron and looked up, offering my standard customer-service smile. But the greeting died in my throat. The woman staring back at me across the pastry case was like looking into a mirror. She had my sharp cheekbones, my dark, unruly hair, and even the same nervous habit of chewing on her bottom lip.

ā€œCan I help you?ā€ I asked, my voice barely a whisper.
She gripped the edge of the counter, her eyes wide and shining with unshed tears. ā€œI didn’t come for the sourdough, Penelope.ā€
Penelope.
I froze. A phantom ringing echoed in my ears. For the last ten years, I had been Harper. Sarah had told me I was Harper Evans, a fiercely independent only child who had tragically lost her parents years before the crash that took my memories.

ā€œMy name is Harper,ā€ I managed to say, though my heart was hammering violently against my ribs.
The woman let out a broken, choked laugh and slid a faded photograph across the glass case. It was a picture of two teenage girls—identical twins—laughing on a sunlit porch.
ā€œI’m Paige,ā€ she whispered. ā€œAnd you’re Penelope. Sarah didn’t find you wandering after the crash, Pen. She caused it.ā€
The walls of the bakery felt like they were instantly closing in, the sweet smell of vanilla and yeast turning cloying. Suddenly, every memory Sarah had so ā€œpatientlyā€ fed me—the stories of my solitary childhood, my lack of extended family, the supposed reason we needed to move three states away immediately after my discharge from the hospital—took on a sinister, suffocating weight.

ā€œShe was our neighbor,ā€ Paige continued, a tear finally escaping and tracking down her cheek. ā€œShe was dangerously obsessed with our family. When her car forced ours off the embankment, I was thrown clear. You were trapped in the wreckage. By the time I woke up in the ICU, the police said you and the driver of the other car had vanished.ā€
Paige reached out, her hand hovering over the glass. ā€œShe didn’t help you rebuild your life from scratch. She kidnapped you to be the family she always wanted.ā€
My phone buzzed in my apron pocket. It was a text from Sarah, who still lived back on the West Coast but never failed to check in every single day at noon.
Thinking of you, sweetie. Having a good morning?
I stared at the screen, a cold, heavy dread pooling in my stomach. For a decade, I had worshipped the woman who had guided me out of the dark void of my amnesia. I had sent her flowers on Mother’s Day; I had paid for her flights to come see my bakery. Now, I realized my entire existence was a carefully curated cage.
I looked back at Paige—at my sister—and slowly untied the strings of my apron.

ā€œWe need to go to the police,ā€ I said, locking my phone. ā€œRight now.ā€

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Staff writer at English US Story.