I was fourteen the day my father died.
Everything after that felt like a blur—black dresses, quiet whispers, the smell of flowers that made my stomach turn. But what I remember most clearly wasn’t the funeral.
It was her voice.
“Pay me $400 rent,” my stepmom said, standing in the doorway of my room just a week later. Her arms were crossed, her expression cold in a way I had never seen before. “Or I’ll send you to boarding school.”
I thought she was joking. I actually laughed.
Then I realized she wasn’t.
“I don’t have that kind of money,” I said, my voice shaking.
“Then I guess you’d better start packing.”

I begged. I cried. I reminded her I was still a kid. That this was my home. That my dad wouldn’t have wanted this.
Her face didn’t change.
“Your father isn’t here anymore,” she said flatly. “And I’m not running a charity.”
I stayed as long as I could—two more weeks, scraping together excuses, hoping she’d soften.
She didn’t.
One night, she left my suitcase by the front door.
“I’ve arranged the paperwork,” she said. “Boarding school. You leave tomorrow.”
That was it.
No hug. No goodbye.
Just… gone.
Boarding school felt like another planet.
Cold hallways. Strangers everywhere. Rules for everything. I kept my head down, spoke when spoken to, and tried not to think about the house. About my dad. About her.
Because thinking about her made something sharp twist in my chest.
I told myself she didn’t want me. That I was just a burden she got rid of the first chance she had.
That belief became armor.
I wore it for two years.

I was sixteen when the nurse found me.
It was late afternoon. I had just come back to my dorm after classes when there was a knock at the door.
When I opened it, a woman in scrubs stood there, holding a small envelope.
“Are you…?” she said my name carefully.
“Yeah,” I answered, confused.
Her expression softened, but there was something heavy behind her eyes.
“I’m sorry to come like this,” she said. “But… a patient asked me to find you.”
“A patient?”
“She passed away this morning,” the nurse said gently. “Her last wish was for you to have this.”
She handed me the envelope.
My hands started shaking before I even opened it.
“Who was she?” I asked.
The nurse hesitated.
Then, quietly, “Your stepmother.”
I didn’t remember closing the door.
I only remember sitting on my bed, staring at the small flash drive inside the envelope like it might explode.
My heart was pounding so hard it hurt.
She was… gone?
Before I could stop myself, I plugged it into my laptop.
A single folder appeared.
“For You When You’re Ready.”
My throat tightened.
I clicked.
Inside were documents—dozens of them. Bank statements. Transaction records. My name appeared over and over again.
I leaned closer to the screen, trying to understand.
And then I saw it.
$400.
Deposited every single month.
For two years.
My breath caught.
“No…” I whispered.
I scrolled faster. The dates were exact. Like clockwork. Month after month.
The sender?
Her.
The receiver?
An account under my name.
My vision blurred.
“She… she was paying it?”
The room felt too small. Too quiet.
I clicked on the last file.
A letter.
I don’t remember sitting down, but suddenly I was.
Reading.
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