“Actually,” Vanessa continued, circling me like a shark, “I’ve already spoken to Principal Hendricks. Single mothers who work night shifts scrubbing floors shouldn’t be shaping our children’s futures. It sends the wrong message. Please leave. Quietly.” She turned to the crowd, arms wide. “Am I right, everyone? This is a school for our children’s success, not a charity case parade.” A few nervous chuckles. My hands shook around the tamale tray. Then the double doors of the gymnasium swung open. Heavy footsteps. A tall man in a charcoal suit walked in flanked by two staffers and a photographer from the Chronicle. Mayor Daniel Ortiz. The room went dead silent. He scanned the crowd, then his eyes locked onto me and his entire face broke into the widest smile. “Rosa! There you are!” He crossed the gym in six long strides, ignoring Vanessa entirely, and wrapped me in a warm hug. “I’ve been looking everywhere for you. The Governor’s office just confirmed — you’re officially our county’s Civilian of the Year for founding the Overnight Custodians Literacy Program. Twelve schools. Four hundred kids reading above grade level. Including this one.” He turned to the frozen crowd. “Rosa Delgado owns Delgado Facilities Group. Forty-two contracts across three counties. She scrubs toilets on Tuesdays because she believes every leader should still know the work.” He held up a heavy bronze medal. Vanessa’s champagne flute slipped from her fingers and shattered on the polished floor. Her mouth opened. Nothing came out. The mayor turned slowly toward her, still smiling politely. “I’m sorry — and you are?” Lily ran across the gym and threw her arms around my waist. I kissed the top of her head and finally let the tears fall.
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