My Twin Buried Me on Paper. Six Years Later, Harvard Heard My Name-Tep

The mailbox at 19 Maple Lane always stuck after rain.

It was black metal, scratched around the handle, with white numbers my father had repainted every few years so the house still looked careful from the street.

My father had a key to it.

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My mother had a key to it.

My twin sister, Sloan, had a key on a little enamel bumblebee keychain she swung around her finger whenever she wanted people to notice she had been trusted with something.

I did not have a key.

When I was eleven, I asked for one, and my mother looked at me as if I had requested access to the family bank account.

“You’d lose it, Arlene,” she said.

That was how things worked in our house.

Sloan got trust.

I got warnings.

By the time we were seventeen, the difference had become so normal that everybody treated it like weather.

Sloan’s name went on the good towels, the better college-prep folders, the framed awards in the hallway.

Mine went on chore charts, appointment reminders, and the little sticky notes my mother left on the fridge when something had to be picked up or cleaned before she came home.

We were twins, but my parents had spent our whole lives pretending that one of us was a daughter and the other was a problem they had agreed to manage.

The spring the Harvard letters were due, the whole house smelled like anticipation.

My father kept checking the mail before work, then again when he came home.

My mother baked things she never baked on ordinary weeks.

Sloan acted nervous in the charming way people do when they already believe the world is about to applaud.

I was nervous in the quiet way people become when they know good news can still be stolen before it reaches their hands.

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