Bianca wasn’t done. She raised her champagne flute and announced, “Let’s give a round of applause to our scholarship families. It takes a village, doesn’t it? Especially when there’s no father in the picture.” The laughter was thinner this time. Mateo’s ears went red. I squeezed his shoulder and whispered, “Eyes up, mijo.” Then the lights dimmed for the keynote. The headmaster stepped to the mic. “Before I introduce tonight’s speaker, I want to acknowledge someone who has quietly shaped this school for eleven years.” A spotlight swung. It landed on me. “Daniela Reyes started here as a custodian while finishing her engineering degree at night. Three years ago, she patented a low-cost water filtration unit now used in twelve countries. She has personally funded fourteen of our scholarships, including tonight’s valedictorian, her son, Mateo Reyes.” The room went dead silent. Bianca’s flute froze halfway to her lips. The headmaster continued, “Our keynote tonight was going to be a surprise. Please welcome the founder of Reyes Clean Water, and the newest member of the Ashford Board of Trustees, Daniela Reyes.” I walked past Bianca slowly. I didn’t glare, didn’t gloat. I just stopped, looked at her name tag, and tapped it once with my finger, the way she had tapped mine. “Oh, honey,” I said softly, “this says GUEST. You must be lost.” A single laugh cracked from the back of the room, then another, then the whole ballroom. Bianca’s face went the color of her lipstick. At the mic, I thanked the janitors first, by name, every one of them. I told the room that I still mopped the east wing on Sundays because it kept me humble, and humility was the only inheritance my mother left me worth keeping. Mateo was crying in the front row, smiling so hard his cheeks shook. Bianca slipped out a side door before dessert. Her husband stayed. He asked if my company was hiring. I said we were, for someone who could clean up messes. He didn’t laugh. Nobody at that table did.
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