My blood turned to ice. “Dad, no,” I whispered. “I don’t even have my license yet.”

“Malik is applying to the Ivy League next month,” Calvin hissed into my ear. “We are not letting a DUI ruin his future. You are a minor. The record will be sealed. You take the fall, or you get out of my house tonight.”

So I took the fall.

I stood in front of a judge and lied to protect the golden child. That juvenile record became a stain I had to scrub ten times harder than anyone else just to get nominated to West Point. That was the moment I learned the truth about my place in this family.

Malik was the asset.

I was the liability insurance.

The day I received my acceptance letter to the United States Military Academy at West Point, I was foolish enough to think things might finally change. I ran into Calvin’s study and laid the heavy cream-colored envelope on his mahogany desk, smiling so hard my face hurt.

He barely looked up from The Wall Street Journal.

He glanced at the Army seal and scoffed. “Good. The military is the dumping ground for society’s rejects. At least you’ll stop eating my food. Just don’t expect me to come to your little parade.”