My father thought I had come home as the quiet daughter he could still erase. No badge. No white coat. No title. Perfect. So when he told a stranger, “She quit medicine years ago,” I stayed silent. Until the dean walked over, looked him in the face, and said, “Dr. Rowan is one of the finest surgeons we’ve produced.” That was the first crack. The forged signature was the second.

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Don’t embarrass me.

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So I answered evenly.

“Surgery is hard. The hours are brutal. Training takes more than people understand.”

Dad relaxed.

Then I added, “But I didn’t change direction.”

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Paul blinked.

Dad laughed too sharply. “She means she stayed in the medical world. Hospitals, systems, paperwork. Important work.”

“I mean I’m a cardiothoracic surgeon,” I said.

The air around us went still.

My father’s face reddened. “Amelia.”

That single word carried my whole childhood.

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Stop. Behave. Don’t correct me.