The entire courtyard fell silent.
The university president, Dr. Wallace, shifted his gaze from my trembling hands to my parents’ furious expressions. “Miss Bennett,” he said cautiously, “are you making an official statement?”
“Yes,” I replied. “And I have proof.”
Mom let out an exaggerated laugh. “This is ridiculous. She’s always been dramatic.”
I looked directly at her. “Was I dramatic when you opened student loans in my name?”
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Her smile disappeared instantly.
Four years earlier, I had been admitted to Westbridge University with a partial scholarship. I worked two jobs to cover the remaining costs. Then, during my second year, I discovered three separate loans tied to my Social Security number—loans I had never authorized. The funds had been deposited into an account linked to my parents.
When I confronted them at the time, Dad claimed I owed them for raising me. Mom insisted no one would ever believe a daughter who “always wanted attention.” I was nineteen years old, broke, frightened, and completely alone. So I stayed quiet. I studied harder. I worked longer hours. And I collected evidence.
By graduation day, I had everything I needed.
Dr. Wallace accepted the envelope from me. Inside were bank statements, forged signatures, correspondence from loan officers, and a report from the financial-aid investigator who had quietly assisted me for six months.
Dad shoved his way through the crowd. “Those are private family matters!”
A campus police officer stepped in front of him immediately. “Sir, stay back.”
Ethan’s smug expression vanished.
Chloe moved beside me and squeezed my hand. “Keep going.”
So I did.
“They didn’t just steal from me,” I said into the microphone. “They told relatives I was lazy. They told people I dropped out. They used my identity to finance my brother’s failed business ventures while I was sleeping in my car between work shifts.”
Whispers spread across the audience.
Mom’s face twisted with anger. “You ungrateful little liar.”
That nearly shattered me.
Nearly.
Then an older woman forced her way through the crowd. It was Aunt Linda, my mother’s sister. She looked horrified.
“Karen,” she whispered, “you told us Mia refused to speak to the family because she was on drugs.”
My stomach tightened.
I had never known they had said that.
Dad grabbed Mom by the arm. “We’re leaving.”
“No,” Dr. Wallace said firmly. “Campus police have already contacted local authorities.”
Mom turned back toward me. Tears finally filled her eyes, but they were not tears of remorse.
They were tears from being exposed.
“Mia,” she whispered, “please. Think of your brother.”
I glanced at Ethan and then back at her.
“For once,” I said, “think of me.”
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