Then Principal Hayes stepped to the microphone and said she wanted to do something out of order. Every year, she explained, the school gave one Community Heart Award to a parent whose quiet work shaped a child’s character. This year, the students had voted. She read the winning essay aloud. My dad works at night so I can sleep safe. He scrubs floors nobody wants to touch so our city doesn’t get sick. He says dirty jobs are still honest jobs, and honest is the cleanest thing a person can be. The room went still. Principal Hayes looked up and said, Would Marco Delgado please come to the stage. I couldn’t move. Eli stood up first. He turned around in the crowd, found me by the exit, and started clapping, tears running down his face. Then a teacher clapped. Then the janitor by the door. Then row by row, the whole auditorium rose. Brittany Callahan sat frozen, her hands in her lap. I walked down the aisle in my coveralls, grease still under my fingernails, and my son met me halfway and grabbed my hand like he was five again. On stage, Principal Hayes pinned a small gold heart to my chest, right above the word Sanitation, and whispered, He talks about you every single day. Then she turned to the microphone and added, To the parents who felt uncomfortable tonight, I hope you remember this: our children are watching who we choose to respect. Brittany got up quietly and left before the reception. Eli didn’t let go of my hand the entire drive home. He just kept looking at the little gold heart on my chest and saying, I told them, Dad. I told everyone.
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