I did not tell my parents. Not because I was trying to punish them. Because for once I wanted something in my life that belonged entirely to me.
The move to Ashford Heights happened at the start of the fall semester. The campus looked exactly like the photos Sadie had posted—stone buildings, green lawns, students walking around as if confidence had been built into their bones.
For the first few weeks I kept my head down. I went to class. I studied. I rebuilt my routine. No announcements. No explanations.
Then one afternoon I was in the library reviewing notes when I heard a voice I had known all my life.
“Avery?”
I looked up.
Sadie stood there holding an iced coffee, staring at me like she had seen a ghost.
“How are you here?” she asked.
“I transferred.”
She blinked. “Mom and Dad didn’t say anything.”
“They don’t know.”
Her expression sharpened with confusion. “How are you paying for this?”
“Scholarship.”
She was quiet for a moment. I watched surprise give way to disbelief, then something more complicated. Something that looked a little like guilt.
I started gathering my books.
“I have class,” I said.
As I walked away, my phone began vibrating in my pocket. I did not need to look to know what it was.
Missed calls from my mother. Messages from Sadie. Then one text from my father.
Call me.
For years, silence had belonged to them.
Now it belonged to me.
I waited until the next morning to answer.
“Avery?” my father said the moment I picked up.
“Yes.”
“Your sister says you’re at Ashford Heights.”
“I am.”
“You transferred without telling us.”
I stood in the middle of the courtyard while students moved around me.
“I didn’t think you’d care,” I said.
A pause.
“Of course I care,” he said. “You’re my daughter.”