When I was a kid, my mom constantly invented games. The Quiet Game. The Who Can Make Their Cookie Last Longer? Game. A perennial favorite, The Marshmallow Game involved eating marshmallows while wearing puffy Goodwill jackets indoors, to avoid turning on the heat. The Flashlight Game was what we played when the electricity went out. We never walked anywhereโwe raced. The floor was nearly always lava. The primary purpose of pillows was building forts.
Our longest-lasting game was called I Have A Secret, because my mom said that everyone should always have at least one. Some days she guessed mine. Some days she didnโt. We played every week, right up until I was fifteen and one of her secrets landed her in the hospital.
The next thing I knew, she was gone.
โYour move, princess.โ A gravelly voice dragged me back to the present. โI donโt have all day.โ
โNot a princess,โ I retorted, sliding one of my knights into place. โYour move,ย old man.โ
Harry scowled at me. I didnโt know how old he was, really, and I had no idea how heโd come to be homeless and living in the park where we played chess each morning. I did know that he was a formidable opponent.
โYou,โ he grumbled, eyeing the board, โare a horrible person.โ
Three moves later, I had him. โCheckmate. You know what that means, Harry.โ
He gave me a dirty look. โI have to let you buy me breakfast.โ Those were the terms of our long-standing bet. When I won, he couldnโt turn down the free meal.
To my credit, I only gloated a little. โItโs good to be queen.โ
I made it to school on time but barely. I had a habit of cutting things close. I walked the same tightrope with my grades: How little effort could I put in and still get an A? I wasnโt lazy. I was practical. Picking up an extra shift was worth trading a 98 for a 92.
I was in the middle of drafting an English paper in Spanish class when I was called to the office. Girls like me were supposed to be invisible. We didnโt get summoned for sit-downs with the principal. We made exactly as much trouble as we could afford to make, which in my case was none.
โAvery.โ Principal Altmanโs greeting was not what one would call warm. โHave a seat.โ
I sat.
He folded his hands on the desk between us. โI assume you know why youโre here.โ
Unless this was about the weekly poker game Iโd been running in the parking lot to finance Harryโs breakfastsโand sometimes my ownโI had no idea what Iโd done to draw the administrationโs attention. โSorry,โ I said, trying to sound sufficiently meek, โbut I donโt.โ
Principal Altman let me sit with my response for a moment, then presented me with a stapled packet of paper. โThis is the physics test you took yesterday.โ
โOkay,โ I said. That wasnโt the response he was looking for, but it was all I had. For once, Iโd actually studied. I couldnโt imagine Iโd done badly enough to merit intervention.
โMr. Yates graded the tests, Avery. Yours was the only perfect score.โ โGreat,โ I said, in a deliberate effort to keep myself from sayingย okay
again.
โNot great, young lady. Mr. Yates intentionally creates exams that challenge the abilities of his students. In twenty years, heโs never given a perfect score. Do you see the problem?โ
I couldnโt quite bite back my instinctive reply. โA teacher who designs tests most of his students canโt pass?โ
Mr. Altman narrowed his eyes. โYouโre a good student, Avery. Quite good, given your circumstances. But you donโt exactly have a history of setting the curve.โ
That was fair, so why did I feel like heโd gut-punched me?
โI am not without sympathy for your situation,โ Principal Altman
continued, โbut I need you to be straight with me here.โ He locked his eyes onto mine. โWere you aware that Mr. Yates keeps copies of all his exams on the cloud?โ He thought Iโd cheated. He was sitting there, staring me down, and Iโd never felt less seen. โIโd like to help you, Avery. Youโve done extremely well, given the hand life has dealt you. I would hate to see any plans you might have for the future derailed.โ
โAny plans Iย mightย have?โ I repeated. If Iโd had a different last name, if Iโd had a dad who was a dentist and a mom who stayed home, he wouldnโt have acted like the future was something Iย mightย have thought about. โIโm a junior,โ I gritted out. โIโll graduate next year with at least two semestersโ worth of college credit. My test scores should put me in scholarship contention at UConn, which has one of the top actuarial science programs in the country.โ
Mr. Altman frowned. โActuarial science?โ
โStatistical risk assessment.โ It was the closest I could come to double- majoring in poker and math. Besides, it was one of the most employable majors on the planet.
โAre you a fan of calculated risks, Ms. Grambs?โ
Like cheating?ย I couldnโt let myself get any angrier. Instead, I pictured myself playing chess. I marked out the moves in my mind. Girls like me didnโt get to explode. โI didnโt cheat.โ I said calmly. โI studied.โ
Iโd scraped together timeโin other classes, between shifts, later at night than I should have stayed up. Knowing that Mr. Yates was infamous for giving impossible tests had made me want to redefineย possible. For once, instead of seeing how close I could cut it, Iโd wanted to see how far I could go.
Andย thisย was what I got for my effort, because girls like me didnโt ace impossible exams.
โIโll take the test again,โ I said, trying not to sound furious, or worse, wounded. โIโll get the same grade again.โ
โAnd what would you say if I told you that Mr. Yates had prepared a new exam? All new questions, every bit as difficult as the first.โ
I didnโt even hesitate. โIโll take it.โ
โThat can be arranged tomorrow during third period, but I have to warn you that this will go significantly better for you ifโโ
โNow.โ
Mr. Altman stared at me. โExcuse me?โ
Forget sounding meek. Forget being invisible. โI want to take the new exam right here, in your office, right now.โ