“Rosa Delgado, please come to the stage.” The room went quiet in that ugly, curious way rooms do when nobody knows what’s happening yet. I walked down the center aisle in steel-toe boots, past Vanessa’s table, past the champagne, past a hundred faces trying to figure out if this was a mistake. Mayor Ellis was already at the microphone. “Six months ago,” he said, “a woman on the overnight janitorial staff at Lincoln Prep noticed a gas leak in the chemistry wing at 2 a.m. She didn’t call it in and go home. She evacuated the dormitory herself, room by room, and stayed until the fire marshal arrived. Forty-one students. Zero injuries.” He turned to me. “Tonight, on behalf of the city, we are naming Rosa Delgado Citizen of the Year.” The applause started slow and then broke like a wave. I found Mia in the crowd — she was standing on her chair, both hands over her mouth, crying. Vanessa was still seated, frozen, wine glass halfway to her lips. The mayor wasn’t finished. “We’re also announcing the Delgado Scholarship, funded by the school board, to cover full tuition for every child of Lincoln Prep’s support staff, effective immediately.” That’s when Vanessa’s own son, a junior, stood up two tables away and started clapping. Then his friends. Then the whole west side of the room. Vanessa finally rose, too, because staying seated would’ve been the story. I stepped down from the stage, walked straight past her table, and stopped. I didn’t raise my voice. “The service door,” I said, “is the one I came in through tonight. It’s also the one I carried forty-one of your children out of.” I kept walking. Mia met me in the aisle and pressed her face into the shoulder of my coveralls, and for the first time in six months she wasn’t ashamed of the smell of bleach. Behind us, someone at Vanessa’s own table quietly asked her to leave.
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