“Maya.”
“You told me I wasn’t worth investing in. I remember it clearly.”
“That was years ago.”
“I know. It didn’t stop mattering.”
He breathed heavily. I imagined him in his office, surrounded by invoices and samples, trying to regain control.
“How are you paying for it?”
“Scholarship.”
“What scholarship?”
“Hawthorne.”
Silence.
“That’s extremely competitive,” he said slowly.
“Yes.”
“You won it?”
“Yes.”
Another pause. Not warm. Recalculating.
“We should talk in person,” he said. “Your mother and I will be at graduation for Amber anyway.”
There it was.
Even now, the day belonged to her.
“I’ll see you there,” I said.
Senior year moved fast. Briarwood was demanding, but I had been trained by harder things than coursework. Without the pressure of endless shifts, my mind finally had room to expand. I wrote sharper papers. I spoke in seminars. I stopped apologizing for office hours.
Amber and I moved in an uneasy orbit. Sometimes she texted awkwardly. Coffee? How was your seminar? Mom is freaking out, just so you know.
Slowly, we began saying things we had never said as children.
“I thought you hated me,” she admitted one afternoon.