Locked Away On Graduation Day Until Her Mother Came Through The Door-Teptep

For four years, I had measured my life in alarms.

Not birthdays.

Not holidays.

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Alarms.

One for lectures.

One for hospital placement.

One for revision.

One for the short sleep I allowed myself before doing it all again.

By the morning of my medical school graduation, I had trained myself not to expect applause from home.

Still, some foolish part of me had hoped my father might look proud.

The house was already awake when I came downstairs.

The kettle had just clicked off, and the kitchen window was misted at the edges from the damp July morning outside.

My graduation gown hung over my arm in its thin plastic cover.

My shoes were by the back door because Eleanor hated anyone wearing outside shoes on her polished hallway floor.

On the table beside my tea mug sat the printed programme.

My name was there.

Valedictorian.

I had stared at it so long the letters had almost stopped making sense.

Eleanor entered without saying good morning.

She was dressed in a pink designer suit, the sort of outfit she wore when she wanted people to know she had married better than she had been born.

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