The Daughter They Called a Bad Investment Took the Graduation Stage-Tep

The night my father called me a bad investment, the house smelled like cold coffee, lemon cleaner, and the kind of silence families pretend is normal.

My mother had wiped down the coffee table twice before he sat down, even though there was nothing on it except two envelopes.

One was Amber’s acceptance letter to Briarwood.

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One was mine to Northlake State.

We were twins, but people had spent our whole lives pretending that meant we should have arrived in the world with the same gifts, the same shine, the same permission to be loved out loud.

Amber was the easy daughter.

She smiled in photos.

She knew how to make relatives feel remembered.

She remembered birthdays, wore the right dress to church events, said “thank you” in the sweet voice adults liked, and somehow always seemed to stand where the light was best.

I was the daughter who fixed things.

I knew where Mom kept the spare batteries.

I knew which drawer held the insurance cards.

I knew how to stretch groceries until Friday and how to get the garage door open when it froze halfway down in winter.

People praised Amber for being promising.

They praised me for being practical.

There is a difference.

Practical means useful until the bill comes due.

Promising means worth paying for.

Dad sat on the couch that night with both envelopes in his hands, Amber’s in his left and mine in his right, like he was comparing two investment portfolios.

My mother sat beside him with her knees pressed together and her hands folded around a mug she had not taken a sip from.

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