At Graduation, Her Parents Tried To Break Her — Then The Papers Came Out-heuh

My father hit me in front of hundreds of people on the day I graduated.

For a second, the world became nothing but sound.

The sharp crack of his palm.

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The scrape of my cap skidding across wet stone.

The sudden death of applause in a courtyard that had been full of proud families, flowers, photographs, and the soft grey drizzle that had followed us all morning.

My cheek burned so fiercely I could feel my pulse in it.

My fingers opened and closed at my sides.

A few people gasped.

Most said nothing, which somehow made it worse.

My graduation cap stopped near the leather diploma holder I had dropped when he struck me.

The black tassel lay in a small puddle, darkened by rainwater, as if the whole day had been tipped into the gutter.

Then my father, Arthur Vance, looked down at me and said, “You didn’t earn that diploma.”

He did not sound drunk.

He did not sound out of control.

He sounded offended.

As if the degree in my name had been an insult to him personally.

Around us, graduates turned in their gowns.

Parents clutched bouquets.

Phones hovered halfway between filming and being lowered out of embarrassment.

A lecturer with a paper cup of tea stopped so suddenly the steam drifted across his face.

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