I didn’t cry. I picked the ribbon out of the buttercream, wiped it on a napkin, and pinned it back on Lily’s dress. Vivian smirked and told security to “escort the help out the service exit.” That’s when the double doors at the front of the ballroom opened and three men in dark suits with earpieces walked in and formed a lane. The room went silent. A tall man in a charcoal suit followed them, scanning the crowd until he spotted us. “Marissa. Lily. I’m so sorry I’m late.” Vivian’s champagne glass froze halfway to her lips. It was Julian Alcott — the keynote speaker of the gala, the tech founder whose foundation had just donated eleven million dollars to fund the school’s new science wing. He walked past Vivian like she was furniture, knelt down in front of Lily, and said, “Congratulations, Student of the Year. Your mom told me you memorized every planet moon.” Then he stood up, turned to the crowd, and said, “Before I give my speech, I need to introduce someone. Six years ago I was sleeping in my car after my company collapsed. I walked into a 24-hour diner at 3 a.m. with eleven dollars. The woman working the overnight cleaning shift saw me crying in the parking lot, gave me her own sandwich, and said, ‘Bad nights end, sir. Keep going.’ I kept going. I built everything back. I have been trying to find her for six years.” He looked straight at me. “Marissa Vance. Tonight my foundation is endowing a full-ride scholarship in your daughter’s name — and I’m personally covering every scholarship family this woman just insulted.” Vivian’s face drained of color. Julian turned to her, calm as glass. “You called her a toilet scrubber. She’s the reason I’m standing here. And as of nine minutes ago, my foundation has withdrawn the science wing funding from any institution that employs you.” The board chair was already walking toward Vivian with a folded envelope. Lily squeezed my hand and whispered, “Mama, you smell like lemons. You always smell like lemons.” And for the first time all night, I smiled.
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