I felt my daughter’s eyes on me, waiting to see if her mother would crumble. I set down the small cardboard box I’d brought for my presentation and took a slow breath. Before I could speak, the double doors at the back of the auditorium swung open. Principal Alvarez rushed in, out of breath, followed by two men in dark suits and a woman carrying a leather folio embossed with the district seal. The room went silent. Alvarez scanned the crowd, spotted me, and his face flooded with relief. “Dr. Hayes, I am so sorry we’re late, traffic on the interstate was a nightmare.” Tessa’s smile flickered. “Dr. Hayes?” she repeated. Alvarez didn’t even look at her. He turned to the parents and beamed. “Everyone, please welcome our keynote speaker for Career Day. Dr. Marisol Hayes, the district’s newly appointed Superintendent of Schools, and the woman personally responsible for the twelve-million-dollar STEM grant every child in this building is about to benefit from.” Gasps rippled across the auditorium. Tessa’s hand slowly dropped to her side. I unzipped my custodial jacket, revealing the crisp white blouse underneath, and lifted the ID badge that had been tucked against my chest all morning. “I took the overnight janitor shift for six months,” I said quietly, my voice carrying, “because I wanted to see how our staff were really being treated before I signed the new contracts. I wanted to know which parents respected the people who clean up after their children, and which ones didn’t.” I turned to Poppy, whose eyes were shining, and then back to Tessa. “Your son’s scholarship application crossed my desk this morning, Tessa. We’ll be having a conversation about that. Privately.” Tessa’s mouth opened, but no sound came out. Poppy stood up in her seat and, in front of every parent in that room, started to clap.
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