Still, I tried. I worked hard, stayed out of trouble, and put everything into my future. I built a college list from scratch, making color-coded spreadsheets.
I wrote draft after draft of essays at the kitchen table with a bowl of instant ramen beside me. Through all of this, he hovered in the living room—not reading my essays, just making sure I was working. My grades were good.
Mostly A’s, a few B’s. I took Honors English, AP Psych, and had a solid SAT score. On the inside, I wanted to feel proud.
But my body always seemed too tense to celebrate. I knew why—my father never saw my achievements as reasons to praise me. “You didn’t meet the standard,” he said one night.
He tossed the folder of all my college prep onto the table so hard the roast chicken nearly slid off the plate. “I’m pulling your college fund, Lacey. A deal is a deal and you haven’t done your part.”
“Because of a B in Chemistry?
Dad… really?” I stared at the table, stunned. “I expected more from you, Lacey. What is this nonsense?
What have you been doing instead of studying? I swear to the Lord, if you’ve been seeing a boy behind my back… there will be hell to play with.”
There hadn’t been a boy. I knew better than to sabotage my freedom.
And trust me—I studied. But that Chemistry final had been brutal. Yet I didn’t beg or cry.
What I felt instead was relief. Deep down, I hadn’t wanted to enter college with my father still controlling every detail. Four more years of spreadsheets and guilt-trips?
No thank you. If being slightly imperfect meant escaping him, then he could keep his money. “Of course, Dad,” I said calmly.
I slid the folder to the table’s edge. “I understand. Do you want me to reheat the mashed potatoes?”
I graduated high school with my head held high.
Whenever people asked about my plans, I smiled. “I’m taking some time off… and then I’m going to figure it out.”
Then I got a job. Applied for financial aid.
Took out loans with a heavy swallow. My first semester? I paid for it myself.
It wasn’t easy—work-study shifts, strict budgeting, and a bank account that made me nervous every time I swiped my card. But I had something new: space that belonged only to me. My tiny apartment felt more like home than any place I’d lived.
Meanwhile, my father never told anyone the truth. To the rest of the family, nothing had changed. If anything, he turned himself into the hero of my story.
At family gatherings, he’d brag:
“The tuition’s no joke these days. But I told Lacey that I believe in investing in her future! How could I not?
That kid has potential!”
“She’s smart, yeah… but I still check in on her. As her father, I have to make sure that she’s keeping those grades up. Lacey can’t be fooling around with boys.”
He spoke like he’d built the very foundation I stood on.
I’d hear him and feel heat crawl through my chest—not embarrassment, but anger. Still, I let it slide. I told myself it wasn’t worth the drama.
“You’ve already won by walking away, Lace,” I’d whisper to my reflection. Then the Fourth of July barbecue happened. Aunt Lisa hosted it every year.
She decorated with plastic flags, served fruit salad in a hollowed watermelon, and used flimsy paper plates that buckled under ribs and potato salad. I had just finished my sophomore year and felt proud—tired, but proud. I’d passed all my finals, worked extra hours, and saved a little for fall.
I was sitting on the patio steps balancing a plate on my knees when Uncle Ray asked my father about tuition. “Greg, what’s the tuition like these days? Twenty grand?
Thirty? Jordan’s time is coming soon, and we’re stressing.”
My father chuckled, already three beers in. “You don’t even want to know.
Between books and fees, it adds up. And Lacey enjoys her food, so I have to make sure there’s enough for that, too.”
I didn’t look up. “Why are you asking him, Uncle Ray?” I said.
“I’m the one paying for it. I’ll give you a better breakdown.”
Silence descended instantly. Even the kids waving sparklers froze.
“She’s joking,” my father coughed. “No,” I said, meeting his eyes at last. “I’m not.
He pulled my college fund before I even got in. He said that a B in Chemistry was enough to cancel everything.”
Aunt Lisa’s fork paused midair. “He canceled your college funding over that?”
“That wasn’t the only reason!” my father tried to laugh, but it came out rough.
“It was…” I cut in. “But honestly, I’m glad. I’d rather be in debt than be managed like a project.”
“That’s… insane,” cousin Jordan muttered.
Aunt Lisa leaned back, stunned. “Greg, seriously? You let everyone think you were paying this whole time?
And the one thing my sister asked of you before she passed…”
She sighed. “The one thing Leslie asked was that Lacey’s education be taken care of. And this is what you took that to mean?”
My father’s jaw tightened.
For years, he’d rewritten the truth, and he never expected anyone to challenge him. Later, when everyone drifted to the yard for s’mores, I went into the quiet kitchen for a drink. The counter was sticky from lemonade spills and melted popsicles.
I’d just reached for the fridge when I heard his footsteps. “That was completely out of line, Lacey,” he hissed. “You humiliated me.”
I turned, one hand on the fridge door.
“No,” I said clearly. “You humiliated yourself. I just stopped covering for you.”
His face contorted the same way it used to when I came home late or missed a text.
“You have no idea how hard it is to be a parent,” he snapped. “I did what I thought was right. I’ve had to do it all on my own since your mother died.
It’s… difficult.”
“You punished me for not being perfect,” I said. “You dangled help over my head like a prize I had to earn. And when I needed support, you made it about control.
That’s not parenting, Greg. That’s power.”
He shook his head as if I were rewriting history. “You always twist things… you always make me the bad guy.”
“Maybe,” I said softly.
“Maybe to you… but I paid for every class. I worked hard for every dollar. So you don’t get to take credit anymore.
It’s all on me.”
He stared at me for a long moment before scoffing and walking away. I stood there a minute, letting the refrigerator hum against my palm. Then I grabbed lemonade and rejoined the people who actually cheered when I mentioned making the Dean’s List.
Later, under the firework-lit sky, Jordan handed me a popsicle. “That was badass, by the way,” he said. “Thanks,” I smiled.
“Must have taken a lot to say that, huh, Lace?”
“Not really,” I replied, watching red and gold burst overhead. “It just took enough. I’m done letting him be the bully in my life.”
Now my life is quiet.
My apartment is small—one bedroom, creaky floors, a hissing radiator. But every part of it is mine. The chipped mug by the sink?
I dropped it. The thrifted curtains fluttering in the breeze? Garage sale find, latte in hand.
And the sauce simmering on the stove? My mom’s recipe. It smells like tomato, garlic, and fresh basil—what she made on bad days or when the fridge was bare.
“You can’t go wrong with a pot of pasta,” she’d say, wiping her hands and kissing my head. I open the window wider and lean out. “Hey, Mom,” I whisper.
“I’m making the sauce.”
The wind stirs the room softly, almost like a reply. “I wish you were here. I really do.
But I think you’d be proud of me.”
I stir the sauce, letting the steam rise around me. “I’m staying away from Dad for a while. Not forever—just… for a little while.
I’m done having a bully in my life. And I think you’d understand that better than anyone.”
I slide the pot off the burner and breathe in its warm, tangy scent. “I changed my major today.
Psychology. I want to help people understand how they think, how they feel, how they heal. I think you’d like that.
You always said I was good at listening.”
I return to the window, resting my arms on the ledge. “I’ve come a long way, huh? Maybe not in miles… Oh, Mom, I’d do anything for a hug right now.
I know I’m not alone. Aunt Lisa checks in sometimes, and Jordan’s been great… not perfect, but warm in that clumsy cousin way.”
The clouds drift. The sauce waits.
The window stays open. And finally, I let myself breathe. Note: This story is a work of fiction inspired by real events.
Names, characters, and details have been altered. Any resemblance is coincidental. The author and publisher disclaim accuracy, liability, and responsibility for interpretations or reliance.
All images are for illustration purposes only.
