Father Raised His Camera For My Twin, Then The Dean Called My Name-heuh

At my twin sister’s graduation, my father lifted his camera the second her section was called—but then the dean said, “Please welcome Francis Townsend, our Whitfield Scholar and valedictorian,” and the man who once told me, “You’re smart, but you’re not special. There’s no return on investment with you,” went so rigid it looked like somebody had turned him to stone as I stepped into the aisle toward a stage he had never once imagined would belong to me.

My name is Francis Townsend.

Four years before that moment, before the black gown, before the gold sash, before a whole stadium heard my name, my father made a decision about me from his leather chair.

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It was raining that evening, soft against the windows, the kind of grey weather that made the whole house feel smaller.

The kettle had just boiled in the kitchen, and my mother had carried in two mugs as if tea could make cruelty more respectable.

Victoria sat beside me on the sofa, phone in her hand, smiling at nothing and everything.

She had been accepted to Whitmore University.

Everyone in our house seemed to understand that this was not just news.

It was proof.

Proof that Victoria had been worth the lessons, the attention, the new dresses for interviews, the proud introductions at family gatherings.

Proof that my father’s investment had paid off.

I had been accepted to Eastbrook State.

It was a solid university.

It was respected.

It was the result of late nights, careful essays, and working harder than anyone in my family had cared to notice.

But it did not sound grand when my father said it aloud.

It did not make him sit taller.

It did not make my mother press her hand to her chest.

It was, in his eyes, sensible but unimpressive.

Cheaper, too.

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