Skip to content

Best Recipes

  • Privacy Policy

At my college graduation

articleUseronMay 1, 2026

I stood in the hallway staring at the wood grain, feeling sick. Someone had called him. Someone who knew enough to imitate me. Someone who wanted me to look careless and unprofessional in front of the one professor whose respect mattered most to me.

When I got back to the dorm, Sarah looked up from her laptop, took one glance at my face, and closed it.

“What happened?”

I told her everything. The money. The canceled meeting. The strange details that no longer felt random.

“That’s creepy,” she said. “Who hates you that much?”

“I don’t know.”

But deep inside, a tiny voice had already started whispering a name. I pushed it away.

No, I told myself. She’s jealous, but she wouldn’t go this far. She’s my sister.

The incidents kept coming. Food deliveries I never canceled were suddenly canceled. Library books I had returned somehow showed up in the system as missing, along with expensive fines. Then the rumors began.

I would walk into a lecture hall and conversations would stop. A few students would glance at me and lower their voices. One day a guy from biology leaned over and asked, almost casually, “Hey, is it true?”

“Is what true?”

“That you buy your essays online.”

I dropped my pen.

“What? Who said that?”

He shrugged. “I don’t know. I just heard there’s some post about it.”

The walls of the campus started to feel as if they were closing in. I was pulling all-nighters. I was earning every grade honestly. And somewhere, someone was building a version of me that was false and poisonous and easy to spread.

I changed my passwords. I covered my laptop camera. I started looking over my shoulder while crossing campus. I called home again.

“Mom, weird things are happening,” I said. “People are spreading stories about me.”

“Nora, you’re stressed,” she said in the dismissive tone she used when she wanted reality to become smaller. “You always get anxious around exams. Ariana says you’ve always been high-strung.”

“I am not high-strung,” I snapped. “Someone is targeting me.”

“Don’t raise your voice at me,” she said sharply. “We have enough going on. Ariana just went through a breakup, and she’s devastated. I need to focus on her.”

Then she hung up.

I sat on my dorm bed with the phone in my hand and realized, with a kind of cold clarity, that I was completely alone. My family did not believe me. Some professors had started doubting me. My reputation was being worn down by something invisible and deliberate.

And then it got worse.

It was the spring of my senior year, two months before graduation. I woke up one Tuesday needing to upload my final thesis proposal by noon. It counted for nearly half my grade in the course. Missing the deadline would mean failing the class. Failing the class would mean not graduating.

I typed in my username and password.

Login failed.

I tried again.

Account locked.

My fingers began to shake.

There was a line at the IT center when I sprinted in, sweating through my sweatshirt and checking the clock every few seconds. When I finally reached the desk, I leaned forward and said, “My account’s locked. I have a deadline in less than an hour.”

The tech support guy typed for a minute, then looked up. “Your account was flagged for suspicious activity.”

“What activity?”

“Multiple failed login attempts from another location last night. Also, someone submitted a request to delete the account entirely at three in the morning.”

“Delete it?” I whispered. “I was asleep.”

“We locked it as a precaution.”

He reset everything at 11:45. I ran to the library, logged in, and uploaded my thesis at 11:58.

I sat back in the chair gasping, staring at the confirmation screen. The proposal was safe for the moment. But my safety no longer felt real at all.

That evening Professor Arias asked me to stay after class. Once the room emptied, he sat on the edge of his desk with a tired expression and said, “I need you to be honest with me.”

“I am being honest.”

“The dean received a formal complaint this morning. Anonymous. It claims you plagiarized your thesis. That you paid someone else to write it.”

The room spun around me.

“That is not true. I have drafts. I have notes. You’ve seen me working on it for months.”

“I know,” he said gently. “I defended you. But the complaint was detailed. It included dates. It included receipts from an essay-writing service in your name.”

“Fake,” I said, hearing my own voice crack. “Those are fake.”

“I believe you,” he said. “But someone is trying very hard to ruin you. If this turns into a hearing, you’ll need proof.”

I walked back to the dorm in the rain without feeling any of it. Sarah took one look at my face and stood up.

“Okay,” she said. “Enough.”

She locked the door, pulled the blinds shut, and sat me down like she was about to perform emergency triage.

“You are not imagining this,” she said. “And this is not random. Random scammers want money. They don’t try to get you thrown out of school. Think. Who knows your schedule? Your student ID? Your old signatures? Your security questions?”

I looked at her, and tears filled my eyes because I already knew where she was going.

“My sister,” I whispered. “Ariana.”

Sarah nodded. “It fits everything. The jealousy. The timing. The fact that it feels personal.”

“But how? She’s not some computer expert.”

“She doesn’t have to be. She just has to know enough about you to pretend to be you.”

The nausea that rolled through me then was unlike fear. It was recognition.

Ariana knew the name of my first pet. The street we grew up on. My childhood passwords. The things a sister knows without trying. She could have reset anything. She could have slipped into my identity the same way she had stepped in front of me my entire life.

“I can’t accuse her without proof,” I said. “My parents will say I’m attacking her.”

“Then get proof,” Sarah said. “Real proof. Hire someone.”

“With what money?”

« Previous Next »

My husband invited his ex to our housewarming and told me if I couldn’t accept it, I could leave. So I gave him the calmest, most “mature” response he’s ever seen.

My ex rushed into my ER carrying his injured daughter, only to find me—the doctor he abandoned—seven months pregnant with his baby. I didn’t cry.

My father looked at my wheelchair, took a drink of beer, and told me to go to the VA because he “didn’t have space for cripples” in the house I had secretly paid off for him

My mom was sentenced to d!e for ᴋɪʟʟɪɴɢ my dad, and for six years, no one believed she was innocent. 5 minutes before the execution, my little brother hugged her and whispered something that shattered everything. – usnews

My Son’s Valedictorian Speech Stopped Halfway Through – Then He Looked at His Stepfather and Said, ‘Now Everyone Will Find Out What You Did’

Le secret que mon ex-mari a découvert trop tard

Recent Posts

  • My husband invited his ex to our housewarming and told me if I couldn’t accept it, I could leave. So I gave him the calmest, most “mature” response he’s ever seen.
  • My ex rushed into my ER carrying his injured daughter, only to find me—the doctor he abandoned—seven months pregnant with his baby. I didn’t cry.
  • My father looked at my wheelchair, took a drink of beer, and told me to go to the VA because he “didn’t have space for cripples” in the house I had secretly paid off for him
  • My mom was sentenced to d!e for ᴋɪʟʟɪɴɢ my dad, and for six years, no one believed she was innocent. 5 minutes before the execution, my little brother hugged her and whispered something that shattered everything. – usnews
  • My Son’s Valedictorian Speech Stopped Halfway Through – Then He Looked at His Stepfather and Said, ‘Now Everyone Will Find Out What You Did’

Recent Comments

  1. Virginia Galindo on Woman Who Called Michelle Obama an Ape is Going to Prison for FEMA Fraud
  2. Earnestine Pittman on My Rich Son Looked at My Pot of Beans and Asked, “Where’s the $2,500 We Send You Every Month?”
  3. Daniel Z Kambai on My Stepmom Raised Me After My Dad Died When I Was 6 – Years Later, I Found the Letter He Wrote the Night Before His Death
  4. Kanyambindwa Joshua on I Gave My Last $10 to A Homeless Man in 1998, and Today a Lawyer Walked Into My Office With A Box – I Burst Into Tears the Moment I Opened It
  5. Kanyambindwa Joshua on I Gave My Last $10 to A Homeless Man in 1998, and Today a Lawyer Walked Into My Office With A Box – I Burst Into Tears the Moment I Opened It

Archives

  • June 2026
  • May 2026
  • April 2026

Categories

  • Uncategorized
Proudly powered by WordPress | Theme: Justread by GretaThemes.