They Paid For Her Twin’s College. Graduation Exposed Their Mistake-Tep

The first time my father called me a bad investment, he did not raise his voice.

That made it worse.

Anger would have given me something to fight.

Image

Instead, he sat in our Denver living room with two college acceptance letters on the coffee table, one for my twin sister Amber and one for me, and treated our futures like numbers in separate columns.

The room smelled faintly of lemon polish, burnt coffee, and the chicken my mother had left warming too long in the oven.

The heater clicked inside the wall.

Amber sat on the couch with one knee tucked under her, already smiling.

She did not know everything he was about to say.

But she knew enough.

My letter had Northlake State printed at the top.

Amber’s had Briarwood.

My father lifted her envelope first.

‘We’re paying for Briarwood,’ he said. ‘Full tuition. Housing. Everything.’

Amber made a small sound, a gasp polished just enough to sound surprised.

My mother’s face lit up.

She was already talking about comforters, dorm lamps, and whether Amber should take the good towels from the linen closet.

I looked at my own letter sitting on the table.

I had earned that acceptance.

I had stayed up late, worked weekends, studied during lunch, and filled out the application without anyone reminding me.

My father slid the envelope back toward me with two fingers.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *