I laughed as I took food from the poorest boy… until a letter from his mother took away my appetite…

I used to steal my poor classmate’s lunch every day…until I found out who was really rich.

I was the terror of the school. That’s not an exaggeration, it’s a fact. When I walked through the hallways, the younger children would look down, and the teachers would pretend not to see certain things.

My name is Sebastian. I’m an only child. My father was an influential politician, one of those who appear on television smiling while talking about “equal opportunities.”

 

 

My mother owned a chain of luxury spas. We lived in a mansion so large that the silence echoed in the hallways.

I had everything a boy my age could want: the most expensive sneakers, the latest iPhone, designer clothes, a credit card that seemed to have no limit.

But I also had something that no one saw: a heavy, thick loneliness that accompanied me even when I was surrounded by people.

In school, my power was based on fear. And like any coward with power, I needed a victim.

 

 

Tomás was that victim.

Tomás was the scholarship student. The one who was always at the back of the classroom. The one who wore the uniform inherited from some unknown cousin.

He walked with his shoulders hunched and his eyes fixed on the ground, as if he were asking for forgiveness for existing. 

He always carried his lunch in a wrinkled brown paper bag, stained with oil that betrayed simple, repetitive meals.

 

 

For me, it was a perfect target.

Every day, during recess, I repeated the same “prank.” I would snatch the bag from his hands, climb onto a table, and shout so everyone could hear:

 

 

—Let’s see what garbage the little prince from the favela brought today!

 

 

Laughter erupted like fireworks. I lived for that sound. Tomás never fought back. He didn’t shout. He didn’t push.

He would just stand there, his eyes bright and red, silently pleading for it all to end quickly. I would take out his food—sometimes a bruised banana, sometimes cold rice—and throw it in the trash as if it were contaminated.

Afterwards, I would go to the cafeteria and buy pizza, hamburgers, whatever I wanted, paying with my card without looking at the price.

I never thought of that as cruelty. To me, it was entertainment.

Related Posts

A second grader came home from school and she learned something… LOL

A second grader came home from school and said to her mother, “Mom, guess what? “We learned how to make babies today.” The mother, more than a…

My husband left me for a younger woman and took our entire family to his

…in the shadows, where I could witness the scene unfold without being seen. They arrived in a convoy of laughter and anticipation, the rented SUV pulling up…

I Thought I Was a Successful Father—Until I Came Home Early One Day

I came home early that afternoon because the meeting in Zurich had been canceled without warning. For once, I didn’t call ahead. No assistant. No driver waiting…

I Spent Years Hating My Father — Until My Mother’s Letter Revealed the Truth

Growing up, my father always felt like a locked door I could never quite open. He wasn’t cruel or harsh—just distant. His words were measured, his emotions…

My Stepdad Raised Me as His Own After My Mom Passed Away-

There’s a strange dizziness that comes with grief, especially when you’re standing in a room full of people mourning the one person who made your life feel…

“Arrested for Kidnapping My Own Nephew—Until a 7-Year-Old Revealed the Truth”

Rachel called me in a panic on Friday evening asking if I could watch her seven-year-old son, Logan, overnight because she had to work late. I happily…