I had chosen Oakridge because of its academic reputation, not its social status. Sophie was brilliant – reading at a fifth-grade level while still in first grade, solving math problems that challenged children twice her age, asking questions that revealed a mind hungry for knowledge and understanding.
I wanted her surrounded by other gifted children, challenged by rigorous curricula, prepared for whatever path her intelligence might take her.
But something had been wrong for months.
Sophie, who had once bounded out of school chattering about her day, began emerging quiet and withdrawn. She would flinch at sudden noises, beg to stay home on school mornings, and wake up crying from nightmares she couldn’t or wouldn’t explain.