When Lacey’s father makes college conditional, she plays by his rules, until he breaks his own. Now, with the truth buried and her independence won, Lacey must decide how far she’s willing to go to reclaim her story. Some debts are paid in silence.
Others demand a voice…
Some parents have rules. Mine had ultimatums—well, my father did. I was seventeen when my dad, Greg, sat me down at the kitchen table.
A manila folder sat in front of him, and the smug little smile on his face already told me this wasn’t a conversation; it was a contract. “You can go to school on me, Lacey,” he said, folding his arms. “But there are conditions, my girl.”
Then he listed them as if they were part of some parental Bill of Rights:
No grades lower than an A-minus.
He’d pre-approve every class. Weekly check-ins to go over syllabi, deadlines, and professor reviews. My father sat there with a custard tart and a mug of coffee, speaking to me like I was a risky investment instead of his daughter.
“Look, it might sound harsh,” he added. “But I’m trying to teach you responsibility here, Lacey.”
But beneath all that, he meant control. My father never simply talked—he inspected, analyzed, hunted for weaknesses like it was a sport.
In middle school, he went through my backpack after dinner as though he were searching for contraband, rustling through crumpled worksheets and half-sharpened pencils in case a missing assignment revealed a flaw in me. In high school, it only escalated. He emailed teachers if grades weren’t posted on time.
He once forwarded a screenshot of my portal with a single B circled. “Subject line: Explain this, Lacey. No dinner until you do.”
He even texted me the same message before I could respond.
Another time, I was called to the counselor’s office because he accused a teacher of hiding an assignment—she’d simply been behind on grading. The counselor gave me a look that was half sympathy, half exhaustion, like this wasn’t the first time my dad had stormed a school office with his expectations. So yes, I knew exactly what I was signing up for.
But college was the golden ticket—the prize at the end of all the stress. Like most seventeen-year-olds longing for independence, I hoped that if I proved myself, maybe he would finally ease up. My mother had passed away when I was thirteen, and before she died, she made my father promise he’d take care of my education no matter what.
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