At dinner, my parents demanded I apologize to their golden p4

The funny thing was, they thought I still needed them.

Six months earlier, after Brandon “borrowed” my social security card to “help with insurance paperwork,” I started scanning everything. Bank notices. Loan letters. The locked file cabinet in Dad’s office. The email Mom left open on the family iPad. I didn’t understand all of it at first, but I understood enough to make copies.

My name was on loans I had never taken.

My dead grandmother’s trust had been drained.

And Brandon’s truck, the one Dad bragged he bought with “hard work,” had been paid for with money my grandmother left for my tuition.

I folded the deferral form in half. Then in half again.

Mom whispered, “Ava, don’t make this any harder.”

Brandon leaned forward. “Say you lied. Then we can all eat.”

I stood up. My knees were shaking, but my voice came out steady. “Alright.”

Dad smiled, victorious. Brandon actually winked at me.

By sunrise, my room was packed into two trash bags and my old suitcase. I had slept maybe twenty minutes. At 5:48 a.m., Brandon burst into my doorway barefoot, pale as milk, holding his phone like it had bitten him.

“Please tell me you didn’t send it,” he said.

Dad appeared behind him, still in his robe, annoyed. “Send what?”

Then Mom screamed from downstairs.

(I know you’re all very curious about the next part, so if you want to read more, please leave a “YES” comment below!) 

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