The principal cleared his throat and looked away. Not one parent stood up. I bent down, picked my folder out of the trash, and quietly walked to the back row where Mia could still see me. She was crying into her sleeve. That’s when the double doors at the rear of the auditorium swung open and three men in dark suits walked in, followed by a woman with a district badge and a tall man in a charcoal overcoat I recognized instantly — Mr. Alvarez, the superintendent himself. Behind them came a news crew with a shoulder camera. Bethany’s smile froze. Mr. Alvarez walked straight past her, past the principal, and stopped in front of me. He extended his hand. “Captain Reyes. Thank you for coming. We’re ready to begin the ceremony.” The room went dead silent. Captain. Because before I scrubbed floors at night to pay Mia’s medical bills, I spent twelve years as a Marine Corps combat engineer — and last month, the district voted unanimously to name their new STEM wing after the veteran-single-parent scholarship I’d quietly funded for six years using every extra dollar from that “filthy” janitor job. The overcoat man turned to the crowd and lifted a bronze plaque. “Tonight we dedicate the Reyes Family STEM Center, funded entirely by tonight’s honored guest.” Cameras swung toward me. Bethany’s face drained white. She stumbled forward, hand out, stammering, “Captain — I — I didn’t — I was just joking, we’re on the same board, we’re practically friends —” Mr. Alvarez didn’t even look at her. He just said calmly, “Mrs. Whitmore, effective immediately, your seat on this PTA has been —” Mia jumped out of her chair and ran to me, and I lifted her up, uniform and all, as the entire auditorium rose to its feet. Bethany was still talking. Nobody was listening anymore.
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