My Mom Raised Me to Be the “Perfect Daughter,” But I Revealed Her Secret on Graduation DayChapter 1
Ten years of school. Ten years of Mom bringing me meals.
For my safety, she quit her job—sweeping streets just to wait for me after class.
Dad finally snapped: "If you keep spoiling this girl, I want a divorce!"
Mom agreed without hesitation.
Her story went viral. They called her "Mother of the Year."
And I lived up to expectations—top scores in the city, every single year.
We became the single-parent family everyone envied.
Until the day of the college entrance exam, when reporters gathered outside the exam site before dawn.
But the first thing I did when I walked out?
I disowned her.
The crowd erupted. Ungrateful. Heartless. How dare she.
Rachel Monroe, a reporter, couldn't help but ask: "When you were born, someone tried to drown you. Your mother stopped them. She dug through garbage to pay for your education—refused to let patriarchal traditions destroy your future. Why would you cut ties with her?"
I pulled a medical report from my bag. My voice was calm.
"Ask her what's in the 'vitamins' she's fed me for eighteen years. Then you'll understand."
——
The moment I stepped out of the exam site, Mom rushed over. Her apron was still streaked with dust from sweeping.
She pulled a lunch container from inside her jacket, carefully wiped the chopsticks, and held it out to me. "Sweetheart, I made you chicken soup. Exams drain the brain—you need to replenish."
I didn't take it.
Out of the corner of my eye, I caught Rachel Monroe's camera swinging toward us.
I looked down at the soup—golden, glistening, with a few strands of greens floating on top.
Aunt Naomi Dickerson laughed and nudged my shoulder. "Go on, eat! Your mom was up before dawn making this. Didn't even take a sip for herself." She turned to play to the crowd. "Everyone on this block knows—no mother loves her daughter more than yours does."
Mom smiled awkwardly at the camera. "Oh, don't make a fuss. If she likes it, that's all that matters. It's just what parents do."
I glanced at Rachel, who had edged closer. Then, carefully, I took the container—and pulled out a battered tin box hidden beneath the soup.
Inside, three neat rows of vitamins. The wrappers had a cheap, waxy sheen. Powder residue clung to the edges.
I stared at it for a long moment.
Then I slammed the container down on a stone post. The crack split the air.