“I’m sorry.”
“No,” he says. “You’re not.”
Your throat tightens.
He steps forward.
“I warned you not to become attached.”
“You knew,” you whisper.
His face flickers.
“Knew what?”
“That they were lying about Alejandro.”
Mr. Sterling looks toward the hallway.
When he speaks again, his voice is lower.
“I knew this family prefers convenient truths.”
“Then help us.”
He lets out a tired breath.
“You are a child.”
“I’m seventeen.”
“Yes,” he says sadly. “A child.”
You think of your schoolbooks left behind in East L.A. You think of Alejandro gripping your shoulders while learning to stand. You think of Damian calling you too poor to matter.
“No,” you say. “I stopped being a child when my family sold my future.”
Something in his face softens.
For the first time, Mr. Sterling looks old.
Not polished.
Old.