The room went quiet. Mateo’s hand tightened around mine, and I felt every rehearsed apology climb up my throat. I was ready to leave. I had my coat halfway on when Principal Alvarez stepped away from the podium, walked straight past Janet, and stopped in front of me. He asked, gently, if I would join him on stage. I shook my head. He asked again. Mateo pushed me forward. The walk felt like a mile. Under the lights, Alvarez tapped the microphone and told the crowd he had planned to announce the Founders’ Scholarship recipient at the end of the night, but the timing suddenly felt right. He said the school had spent six months quietly reviewing every essay, every teacher recommendation, every attendance record. He said one student stood above all others, not just for grades, but for character forged at home. He read Mateo’s name. The applause started slow, then rose like a wave. Then Alvarez raised his hand for silence and said there was one more announcement. The district had established a new service award, named this year for the employee who, according to every teacher on staff, treats the building like it belongs to the children inside it. He said the inaugural recipient was Rosa Delgado, and the check in his hand, twenty-five thousand dollars, was earmarked for the honoree’s continuing education. I had been saving for two years to finish my nursing degree. I turned toward the crowd, tears already ruining whatever mascara I owned, and I saw Janet frozen with her champagne halfway to her lips. Alvarez leaned into the mic one more time. He said, softly, that the woman who mops these floors has raised the finest young man in this district, and anyone who could not see that had no business calling themselves a parent leader. Janet set her glass down and quietly walked out the side door. Mateo ran up the steps and hugged me so hard the microphone caught it.
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