She called me a garbage woman in front of my daughter’s whole class. Then

I was about to walk out when the double doors at the back of the auditorium slammed open. Three men in dark suits with earpieces stepped inside and scanned the room. Behind them came Mayor Harold Chen, followed by two news cameras and the Deputy Director of the EPA. Vanessa’s smile froze. The mayor walked straight down the center aisle, past the stunned parents, and stopped directly in front of me. “Captain Reyes,” he said, loud enough for every microphone to catch, “I apologize for being late. Traffic was a nightmare.” He turned to the crowd. “Ladies and gentlemen, I’d like to introduce the woman we’re honoring today. Captain Maria Reyes led the emergency response team during the Kellerman Chemical spill last November. She personally pulled four unconscious workers out of a toxic plume while off-duty, then coordinated the twelve-hour containment that kept it out of the reservoir this entire city drinks from.” Gasps rippled through the room. The mayor lifted a velvet box. “On behalf of the state, the Governor’s Medal of Civilian Valor.” Vanessa’s pearls trembled at her throat. She stepped forward with a shaky laugh. “Mayor, there must be a mis—” He didn’t even look at her. He looked at Lily, who was already running down the aisle toward me, and he knelt to her level. “Your mom,” he said gently, “is the reason a lot of kids in this school still have parents.” The cameras swung toward Vanessa. Her mouth opened. Closed. A reporter stepped forward. “Principal Whitmore, is it true you just called our Medal recipient a ‘garbage woman’ in front of her daughter?” Vanessa’s face went the color of wet paper. Lily wrapped her arms around my waist, and for the first time all morning, I let myself smile. I bent down and whispered, “Told you Mommy’s job was important, baby.” Behind us, Vanessa’s heels clicked backward toward the exit — but the school board president was already blocking the door, arms folded.

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