No one asks enough about that particular cruelty, I think. How hard it is to enter the last full year and a half of adolescence as a stranger carrying fresh grief and old anger in a school where friend groups have already formed and teachers already know who belongs to whom. I spent lunch periods in the library because it was easier to look studious than lonely. I learned how to move through hallways without expecting anyone to call my name.
At home, the Thorntons—because in that house I very quickly stopped thinking of them as my mother and stepfather in any emotionally coherent sense—performed family around me without ever really extending it to me.
My mother and Richard sat at one end of the table. Derek sprawled at the other, endlessly discussing classes, plans, fraternity houses, the cost of textbooks, the burden of deciding between coastlines. I served myself from dishes passed over me. When I spoke, it was often after a slight lag in which they all had to register that I had entered the conversation at all.
The first time I asked about college money, I still believed there might be some decent core in my mother that grief had only temporarily covered.
I had been accepted to a strong design program with a partial scholarship. It wasn’t enough. I needed about eight thousand dollars a year after aid, an amount that felt insurmountable to me and probably laughable to the people seated around our dining table.
My hands were sweating under the tablecloth when I finally said, “Mom, can we talk about tuition?”
She didn’t even look up from her salad at first. “What about it?”
“The school gave me a partial scholarship.” I had rehearsed the sentence all afternoon. “But I still need about eight thousand a year. I was wondering if maybe some of Dad’s insurance money could—”
“No.”
The word landed before I finished the question.
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