They Came For Her Twin’s Graduation. Then The Valedictorian Rose.-Candy

My father once told me I was not worth the investment.

He did not shout it.

That was almost worse.

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He said it at the coffee table in our Denver living room, with two acceptance letters laid out like bills he had already decided not to pay.

Amber’s letter was from Briarwood.

Mine was from Northlake State.

My twin sister sat beside my mother with her hands pressed over her mouth, trying to look surprised even though she had been smiling since Dad opened the first envelope.

The room smelled like lemon cleaner and cold coffee.

Rain tapped softly against the front window.

My acceptance letter felt thin in my hands, like paper had no business pretending it could hold a future.

Dad held Amber’s letter in one hand and mine in the other.

He looked at them for a long moment.

Not like a father.

Like a man comparing returns.

“We’re paying for Briarwood,” he said.

Amber gasped.

“Full tuition. Housing. Everything.”

My mother immediately started talking about dorm decorations, bedding, curtains, storage bins, and whether Amber should get one of those white rolling carts for makeup and hair tools.

Amber laughed through her fingers.

I waited.

I told myself he was going to turn to me next.

I told myself parents did not make one daughter’s future a celebration and the other daughter’s future an inconvenience in the same breath.

Then he slid my envelope back across the table.

“We’re not paying for Northlake,” he said.

I looked at him.

He did not look cruel.

That was the part I remembered most.

He looked calm.

“Your sister has potential,” he said. “You don’t. Briarwood is worth the investment.”

The room went very still.

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