My Parents Drained My College Trust While I Was Under Anesthesia-Quieen - Chainityai

My Parents Drained My College Trust While I Was Under Anesthesia-Quieen

The first thing I saw after spinal surgery was not my mother’s face.

It was not my father standing by the bed with the cheap bouquet he had carried into the hospital before sunrise.

It was not my older sister Vanessa pretending to worry from the chair near the window while her phone kept lighting up in her lap.

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It was a man in a gray suit at the foot of my hospital bed, holding a leather folder against his chest like he had brought paperwork into a room where something sacred had just been broken.

My throat felt scraped raw from the breathing tube.

My back was a white-hot line under layers of blankets, tape, and hospital cotton, and the monitor beside me beeped with a steady patience that made no sense at all.

I remember the smell first.

Antiseptic, plastic tubing, warmed sheets, the faint burnt-coffee smell that lives in every hospital hallway no matter what hour it is.

Then the pain.

Then the man.

He stepped closer when he saw my eyes move.

“Celestine,” he said gently, “my name is Clayton Hughes. I’m the trustee for the Betty Lewis Educational Trust.”

For one foggy second, the only part of that sentence I understood was my grandmother’s name.

Betty Lewis was not a trust to me.

She was grilled cheese cut diagonally, lemon trees outside the kitchen window, a ceramic jar of hard candy on the counter, and a woman who believed every child should have at least one adult in the world who kept their word.

She had been dead five years.

The money she left me was supposed to be for school.

Not luxury.

Not vacation.

School.

Books, tuition gaps, fees, the kind of emergency help that keeps a student from dropping out when life gets expensive.

Then Clayton Hughes said, “Your parents transferred thirty-one thousand, two hundred forty-seven dollars and eighty-three cents out of your grandmother’s educational trust while you were under anesthesia.”

The room did not go silent.

That would have been easier.

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