My Parents Billed Me for My Childhood, But the Data Destroyed Them-thuyhien

At 11:43 p.m., with my feet still dirty from the walk home and my father’s leather portfolio lying open beside my keyboard like a dead thing, my phone lit up with a text from my sister.

You need to stop digging.

That was how I knew I was right.

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People like Brooklyn never warn you unless they’re scared.

I stared at the message for a long moment, feeling the hum of my old apartment settle around me.

The air smelled faintly of lemon cleaner and overheated electronics.

My desk lamp was off.

The laptop screen was the only light in the room, throwing everything into a cold blue glow that made even familiar things look sharper than usual.

I typed back three words.

Of what exactly?

She didn’t answer.

That silence gave me more than any confession could have.

I went back to the files.

The first thing I had found was a transfer record buried inside an archived PDF from an old family trust account my grandmother established when I was ten.

It was supposed to be divided equally between Brooklyn and me when we turned twenty-five.

I knew the trust existed because my grandmother once told me, quietly, during Thanksgiving cleanup, “One day, if your parents ever make you feel like you owe them for being born, remember this money was meant to help you stand on your own feet.”

I didn’t forget her exact wording.

At the time, I thought it was just one of those odd, half-serious warnings older women give when they see things nobody else names out loud.

It wasn’t.

The account showed an $89,000 withdrawal executed three years earlier.

Authorized by Eleanor Miller.

My mother.

Memo line: Educational restructuring.

Except there had been no educational restructuring.

I was already out of school by then, working sixty-hour weeks and eating cheap noodles while I paid down my own student loans.

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