The Debt of Blood
My father raised me on one principle: fair exchange.
If I wanted anything, I had to earn it myself.
Fifty cents for washing the dishes. A dollar for mopping the floor. Five dollars for a perfect score on a test.
To buy the pair of white sneakers I had been dreaming of, I spent three months collecting recyclables.
In that house, I lived like a pieceworker, paid by the task.
It was not until my senior year of high school that everything began to crack. I collapsed during morning study, my body worn down by years of malnutrition.
The doctor said I needed better nutrition.
My father stood by my hospital bed and started doing the math.
"Three hundred for the hospital stay. Two hundred for medication. Chester, this all goes on your tab for the future."
I turned my head and saw a boy in a school uniform in the next bed. His father was feeding him spoonfuls of chicken soup, his eyes red with worry.
In that moment, the world I had known for 18 years fell apart.
It turned out not every child had to earn their parents' love.
After I was discharged, I went home and saw the pair of designer sneakers on my brother's feet; it was worth thousands.
That was when I finally woke up.
I tore up the family photo and, without hesitation, applied to the college farthest from home.
Ten years later, my father called me in tears. My brother had taken all his retirement savings, sold the house, and run off with his girlfriend.
He was left with nothing. No home. No one.
I smiled and tossed him a rag.
"Want a place to stay? Sure. It's 50 cents per window. Earn your own rent."