Diane’s 98.7 Score Exposed the Forgery Her Father Planned-Ginny

My cell phone made my face blue in the dark.

For a few seconds, the house was quiet enough that I could hear the air conditioner clicking behind the wall vent and the soft hum of electricity inside the charger at my bedside.

Then the living room burst into laughter again.

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Carol’s laugh always rose higher when she wanted to sound harmless.

Arthur Reynolds, my father, laughed with the low confidence of a man who believed the whole house still belonged to him, even the parts that had my mother’s fingerprints on them.

On my screen was the entrance exam result I had been waiting for all month.

98.7th percentile.

Ranked among the best.

I read it once.

Then again.

Then a third time, because grief has a strange way of making good news feel like contraband when there is nobody safe to celebrate it with.

My mother would have cried.

She would have pressed both hands to her mouth, laughed through tears, and told me she had known all along.

Arthur would not do any of that.

From the hallway, his voice carried through the polished house as he praised Lily, Carol’s daughter, with the kind of softness he had stopped using on me years earlier.

“Lily is really going to make us proud,” he said.

That was how he said it.

Not Carol’s daughter.

Not my stepdaughter.

My daughter.

Lily had barely passed, but the score did not matter to him because Lily represented the family he had chosen after my mother died.

I represented the debt he resented.

I represented the old house in Pasadena that my mother had refused to leave in his control.

For most of my childhood, I did not understand why Arthur could look at me with irritation over things that did not cost him anything.

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