After a whirlwind month of intense pitches and late night negotiations, we officially closed a funding round of fifty million dollars. This investment gave ChainVault a total company valuation of seven hundred million dollars.
The news of the investment made significant ripples in the technology and finance communities, but I decided to keep a very low profile. I chose not to give any public interviews or make any grand statements on social media.
More importantly, I chose not to tell a single person in my family about any of my success. Part of me wanted to prove that I could succeed entirely on my own before I revealed the truth to them.
Another part of me wanted to see the look on their faces when they finally discovered what I had built while they were busy focusing on Kaylee. By the time my graduation ceremony approached, ChainVault had grown to a dedicated team of thirty full time employees.
Our valuation had continued to climb and had recently surpassed the one billion dollar mark. This officially made my company a unicorn in the startup world and made me a paper billionaire at the age of twenty two.
Despite these extraordinary and life changing developments, I maintained my strict daily routine at the university. I completed all of my final coursework and prepared for the upcoming graduation as if I were just another student.
Only a small handful of people knew the truth about my company’s massive success, and I preferred it that way for the time being. Professor Jenkins, who had watched my entire journey from that first research paper, could barely contain her immense pride.
“You should know that a major business magazine is preparing their annual list of influential young leaders,” she mentioned during our last meeting. I simply laughed it off, but secretly I was finally starting to allow myself to feel a genuine sense of pride in my accomplishments.
Against all of the odds and without any family support, I had built something of immense and lasting value. The validation I had sought from my parents for so long had finally arrived, but it had come from an entirely different source.
I had finally found that validation deep within myself. As the month of May approached, I experienced a very complicated mixture of emotions regarding my family’s role in my graduation.
On one hand, I felt immense pride in completing my difficult degree while building a billion dollar enterprise. On the other hand, a small and childish part of me still harbored a desire for my parents to witness this major milestone.
Three weeks before the big day, I mailed formal invitations to my parents and Kaylee at our home in Maryland. I included the official tickets for the ceremony along with a handwritten note expressing how much it would mean to have them there.
Then I waited for their response while checking my phone much more frequently than I would ever care to admit. The call finally came on a Tuesday evening as I was leaving the innovation center after a long day of work.
Seeing my father’s name appear on the screen sent a familiar and unwelcome flutter of anxiety through my chest. “Hello, Dad, it is good to hear from you,” I answered while trying to keep my voice as casual as possible.
“Jordan, we received your graduation invitation in the mail yesterday,” he acknowledged in his typical business like tone. “Yes, I was hoping that you and Mom would be able to make the trip up here,” I said while waiting for a congratulations that never came.
There was a long pause on the other end of the line, and I could hear my mother’s voice in the background asking a question. “It is Jordan on the phone,” my father replied to her before returning his attention to our conversation.
“Unfortunately, we have a significant conflict that weekend that we simply cannot move,” he stated firmly. My heart sank instantly as I asked him what kind of conflict could possibly be more important than my graduation.
“Kaylee has her high school graduation that same week, and we have several major celebration activities planned for her,” he explained. He added that the timing was just not going to work for them to drive all the way up to Philadelphia for my event.
I gripped my phone much tighter as I pointed out that Kaylee’s graduation was on a Thursday while mine was on Saturday. “You could easily attend both ceremonies if you wanted to be there,” I said with a trembling voice.
“Well, we are also taking Kaylee on a massive shopping spree in Miami that weekend as part of her graduation gift,” he replied defensively. I nearly dropped my phone when he finally delivered the line that would stay with me for the rest of my life.
“You will just have to take the city bus to your ceremony because we are currently busy buying your sister a Rolls-Royce,” he said without any shame. I was so stunned by the absurdity of his statement that I could barely find the words to respond to him.
“A Rolls-Royce for an eighteen year old girl who is just finishing high school?” I asked in disbelief. “She has worked very hard in her own way, and she was recently accepted to the University of Miami,” my father defended.
He added that they wanted to properly reward her accomplishment and that I was always the responsible one who could handle things alone. The irony was so thick that I almost wanted to laugh right then and there.
Kaylee had gained admission to her college with a mediocre GPA and a heavy legacy advantage because our father was a donor. Meanwhile, I had graduated at the top of my class and maintained a perfect 4.0 while building a massive company.
“I see how it is,” was all I could manage to say before the call ended. After hanging up, I stood completely frozen on the sidewalk as the city moved around me in a blur.
Maya found me there ten minutes later and immediately recognized the look of devastation on my face. “They are buying her a Rolls-Royce while telling me to take the bus to my own Harvard level graduation,” I whispered.
Maya put her arm around my shoulder and told me that they did not deserve to be there anyway. “We are your real family now, and we will be cheering louder than anyone when you walk across that stage,” she promised.
I decided that I would indeed take the bus to my graduation ceremony just as my father had so cruelly suggested. There was a certain sense of poetic justice to the idea that I wanted to embrace.
I would arrive by public transportation to receive my prestigious diploma and return to my office as a billionaire CEO. Two days before the ceremony, I received an urgent email from the office of the Dean of the business school.
Concerned that there might be some kind of issue with my graduation status, I went to his office immediately. “Miss Casey, thank you for coming in on such short notice during this busy week,” Dean Lawrence greeted me warmly.
He then explained that he had recently received a call from a major business publication regarding a feature story. “You have been named as the youngest self made female billionaire in the technology sector,” he said with a wide smile.
He asked for my permission to briefly recognize this incredible accomplishment during the graduation ceremony. I initially wanted to decline the offer because I valued my privacy, but then I thought about my parents.
I knew they would likely be in the audience now because Kaylee would want to see the spectacle of the event. “That would be acceptable, Dean,” I said after a moment of careful consideration.
Graduation day arrived with a clear blue sky and a gentle breeze that moved through the trees on campus. I stood in front of my mirror and carefully adjusted my cap while smoothing the fabric of my graduation robe.
I kept my original plan and boarded the city bus to travel to the university grounds that morning. The bus was nearly empty, and I sat by the window watching the familiar city streets pass by while reflecting on my journey.
When I finally arrived at the ceremony site, the transformation of the campus was truly stunning to behold. Rows of white chairs lined the grass, and bright banners hung from every historic building in sight.
I scanned the growing crowd of families and eventually spotted my parents standing near the registration area. They looked exactly as they always had, yet I felt like a completely different person as I approached them.
“I see you decided to show up after all,” I said while standing before them. My mother turned with a practiced social smile and leaned in for a brief and cold embrace.
“The traffic was better than we expected, so we decided to make the trip,” my father said without mentioning the Rolls-Royce. Kaylee was standing there looking incredibly bored as she scrolled through her phone with a distant expression.
Our awkward reunion was cut short by the announcement for graduates to begin the processional line. The ceremony began with all of the traditional music and speeches that I had expected to hear.
As the valedictorian, I would be giving the final address after every student had received their diploma. When it was finally my turn to walk across the stage, I felt the weight of the moment pressing down on me.
“Jordan Casey, graduating summa cum laude with the highest distinction in business,” Dean Lawrence announced into the microphone. I shook his hand and accepted my diploma, but then he held onto the microphone for one more announcement.
“I have the privilege of sharing that Miss Casey has also been recognized as the youngest self made billionaire in her field,” he said. A collective gasp of shock rose from the thousands of people sitting in the audience as they began to cheer.
I glanced over at my parents and saw that my father had literally dropped his program onto the grass. My mother sat perfectly still with her hand covering her mouth in a look of total bewilderment.
Kaylee was staring at me with her jaw open, and for once, her phone was nowhere to be seen. I took my place at the podium and delivered my speech about the true meaning of resilience and self belief.
I spoke about how sometimes the people who should support you the most are the ones who teach you to stand alone. As I finished my address to thunderous applause, I felt a sense of completion that had nothing to do with my parents.
When the ceremony finally concluded, I was immediately surrounded by classmates and professors offering their congratulations. Through the thick crowd, I could see my parents desperately attempting to make their way toward me.
“Jordan, why on earth did you not tell us about your massive success?” my father asked as soon as he reached me. He tried to pull me into a hug, but I stood stiffly and maintained my distance from him.
“It never seemed relevant to our recent conversations about buses and luxury cars,” I replied with a calm voice. My mother began talking about how proud they were and how we needed to go to an expensive dinner to celebrate.
“I actually have plans with the people who actually supported me during the last four years,” I told her firmly. Kaylee unexpectedly spoke up and asked if she could come to my party instead of going with our parents.
“I am tired of being the center of attention for doing nothing,” my sister confessed with a look of genuine regret. I told her she was more than welcome to join us, but I made it clear to my parents that they were not invited.
One year later, I am sitting in my new office overlooking the city and watching the world move below me. ChainVault is now a global leader in the industry, and my relationship with Kaylee has become a source of great joy.
She decided to forge her own path away from our parents’ control and is currently working with my foundation. I have learned that true success is not about the money or the fame, but about the person you become when no one is watching.
THE END.