At my own graduation, my father sla:pped me so hard my cap hit the floor. “You don’t deserve that degree,” he spat, while my mother screamed, “You’re just a failure in a gown!”

At my own graduation, my father sla:pped me so hard my cap hit the floor. “You don’t deserve that degree,” he spat, while my mother screamed, “You’re just a failure in a gown!”

“Mia,” she whispered, “please. Think of your brother.”

I glanced at Ethan and then back at her.

“For once,” I said, “think of me.”

Part 3

The police arrived before the graduation crowd had fully dispersed.

There was no applause. No celebration. This was not that kind of ending. The atmosphere felt heavy, painful, and quiet. My parents were escorted into a conference room near the administration building for questioning while I sat outside with Chloe, still dressed in my graduation gown and pressing an ice pack against my cheek.

“You did it,” Chloe said softly.

I looked down at my diploma.

“I didn’t want to do it like this.”

“I know.”

That was the part nobody talks about when they tell you to stand up for yourself. It does not always feel empowering. Sometimes it feels like losing the final piece of a family you spent years hoping would eventually love you the way they should.

A week later, the investigation became official.

The forged loans, the stolen tuition-refund checks, the fake signatures—everything surfaced. My father insisted I had given him permission. My mother claimed she had only been protecting me from “financial irresponsibility.” But the evidence told another story.

Ethan called me once.

“You ruined everything,” he said.

For a moment, I almost apologized out of habit.

Instead, I asked, “Did you know?”