They Burned My College Dreams, Then Thanksgiving Exposed Their Lie-Tep

The day my SAT score posted, I ran into the kitchen with the kind of happiness that makes you forget to be careful.

The printer paper was still warm in my hands.

The dishwasher was thumping under the counter, Mom’s pot was hissing on the stove, and the kitchen smelled like old coffee, onions, and the lemon cleaner she used when she wanted the house to look better than it felt.

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I had been refreshing the score page since sunrise.

Every time the little wheel spun on the screen, I told myself not to expect too much.

Then the number appeared.

1470.

For a second I just sat there at the computer in the corner of the living room, staring at it like it might change if I blinked.

I had not grown up in a house where people made a big deal out of my grades.

If Kyle passed a class, Dad said he was “figuring life out.”

If I got an A, Dad said schools handed those out too easily now.

Still, I thought this would be different.

I thought a number that big would make them look at me like I was real.

I grabbed the printout, took off down the hallway, and almost slipped on the worn rug by the kitchen doorway.

“Dad,” I said, breathless. “Look. I did it.”

He was at the table, leaning back in his chair with one hand around a beer and the other tapping on his phone.

He did not take the paper.

He did not ask what the score meant.

He glanced at it the way he glanced at a receipt before deciding whether to throw it away.

Then he laughed.

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