The moment my SAT scores came out, I, Anna Barnes, took the bottled water my mom Ella Barnes handed me and the beaded bracelet my friend Lionel Murphy gave me, and passed them both to Ryder Carter—the guy who'd been bullying me for ages, someone with AIDS and terrible grades. Because in my past life, I drank that water, and my SAT score ended up becoming my adopted sister Aubrey Barnes', while her score became mine. Within days, my body began deteriorating rapidly for no apparent reason. I started coughing up blood, running fevers, and eventually the pain was so intense I could barely get out of bed. Meanwhile, Aubrey, who had been suffering from stomach cancer, miraculously recovered. I begged Ella to take me to the hospital, but she not only refused—she mocked me, saying I was faking it, cursing at me before locking me in the basement. While I endured the agony of illness, they were outside throwing a lively celebration party for Aubrey. In the end, I died alone in that basement. After my death, Aubrey used my scores to shine at a prestigious university and even got together with Lionel. Only then did I realize that the water Ella had given me was a swap potion—once I drank it, my grades would be stolen. And the beaded bracelet Lionel gave me would transfer Aubrey's illness to me if I wore it for three days, completely draining my life away. When I opened my eyes again, I was back on the day we checked our scores.
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In A Bottle of Water of Exchanging SAT Scores, identity isn’t just stolen—it’s chemically swapped. Anna Barnes’ chilling rebirth begins the moment her SAT scores drop: a bottled water from her mother Ella and a beaded bracelet from friend Lionel aren’t tokens of love, but instruments of erasure. The potion swaps academic fate; the bracelet transfers terminal illness. What follows is a visceral descent—coughing blood, basement imprisonment, and celebratory laughter echoing overhead while Anna wastes away. Her death isn’t tragic irony—it’s systemic betrayal disguised as care.
This isn’t a simple time-loop trope. Anna awakens *with full memory* of her agony, her isolation, and the grotesque symmetry of Aubrey’s recovery and rise. Every detail—the mocking tone, the locked basement door, Lionel’s eventual romance with Aubrey—serves as forensic evidence. The loop isn’t about fixing one mistake; it’s about dismantling layers of complicity: Ella’s cruelty masked as discipline, Lionel’s innocence weaponized, and society’s indifference to a girl whose value is reduced to her test score.
Anna’s power emerges not in revenge, but in rejection: refusing the water, declining the bracelet, exposing the swap before it activates. A Bottle of Water of Exchanging SAT Scores transforms the college admissions race into a haunting allegory—where grades become currency, bodies become vessels, and survival demands radical self-trust. Download the full story now on FreeDrama App.
A Bottle of Water of Exchanging SAT Scores is not just a short drama, it’s like a mirror reflecting the struggles and growth of the characters…
This short drama A Bottle of Water of Exchanging SAT Scores is a double impact on visuals and emotions…
Each episode of A Bottle of Water of Exchanging SAT Scores is like a little puzzle…
Limited-time free event: This free viewing activity is jointly launched by ReelShort and FreeDrama. Click the button to download the APP and watch all episodes of A Bottle of Water of Exchanging SAT Scores for free.