My Family’s Deadly Competition
I come from an old-money family. My grandfather's will was ironclad: whoever gets an Ivy League acceptance letter unlocks 25% of a massive trust fund and a seat on the family board.
Out of four siblings, I was the only one who stood a chance.
Every night, my mother Victoria carefully made me a cup of "organic brain-boosting matcha." My twin sister Chloe and younger brother Mason never got that privilege.
The night before the December SAT—the last chance for Regular Decision Ivy scores—Victoria handed me my green matcha as usual.
The next day, my mind went completely blank during the test. I blacked out.
I missed that application season.
Meanwhile, Chloe—who spent her time at yacht parties and couldn't read an equation—miraculously got an offer from UPenn and sailed right onto the board.
The second year, right before the test, my snobby cousin Brianna reached for my matcha. Victoria slapped her hand away and screamed: "Don't touch Ava's things!"
That exam, I got severe stomach cramps and was rushed to the ER by ambulance.
I had to drop out again. And Brianna—who only cared about designer bags—somehow got into Cornell and took her board seat.
The whole family popped champagne in our Upper East Side penthouse.
I became the laughingstock of Manhattan's elite, having missed two application seasons in a row.
Why did my body crash like clockwork, right at the final, life-changing SAT?
Prepping for the third time, I took no chances.
For three days before the test, I ate only gluten-free detox meals controlled by a private nutritionist.
But the night before the big test, Victoria smiled and brought me that familiar cup of green matcha.