A CEO Verified Her Diploma And Found The Secret Her Parents Buried-Teptep

My father called me a scavenger when I was eighteen years old.

Not because I had failed a class.

Not because I had been reckless.

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Because I asked for two hundred dollars.

The kitchen smelled like lemon cleaner, expensive wine, and the cold silence that lived in our house even when everyone was speaking.

Rain tapped against the windows, soft and steady, while two luxury SUVs sat in the driveway like proof my parents could afford anything they wanted to afford.

I stood by the marble island with a printed spreadsheet in my hand.

Every number was there.

Scholarship money.

Savings from babysitting.

Cash from mowing lawns.

Tips from washing dishes at a diner until midnight.

The last line said what I was short for my freshman textbooks.

Two hundred dollars.

My mother, Barbara, looked at the paper the way she looked at grocery coupons.

My father, Richard, set down his wine glass and stared at me like I had tracked mud across his floor.

“Stop acting like a scavenger, Valerie,” he said.

He did not raise his voice.

He did not have to.

“You’re always begging for scraps.”

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