My name is Noah Bennett.
At school, people knew me as the kid no one dared to challenge. My father was a high-profile politician. My mother owned a luxury wellness brand. I wore designer clothes, had the newest phone before anyone else, and lived in a mansion that felt more like a museum than a home.
I had everything—except attention.
And I took that emptiness out on someone else.
Her name was Emily Carter.
Emily was the scholarship student. Her uniform was worn and slightly oversized, like it had belonged to someone else before her. She kept her head down, avoided eye contact, and carried her lunch in a crumpled brown paper bag stained with oil marks.
Every day during recess, I repeated the same cruel routine.
I’d snatch her lunch, jump onto a bench, and announce loudly, “Let’s see what the charity case brought today!”
Emily never fought back. She just stood there, eyes glassy, waiting for it to be over. I’d toss her food—sometimes just plain rice, sometimes a soft, overripe fruit—straight into the trash while others laughed.