The usher seemed more like a kid who had just graduated from high school. The tag on his uniform said “Brandon”, and he couldn’t even meet my eyes.
“Excuse me, Madam, but the front-row seats are no longer available,” he said. “So you’ll need to look for a place in the standing section behind the room.”
Holding on to the graduation program, I starred towards Row B. It was only a few hours ago when my son, Michael, had put in the two reserved cards for me in the front row himself. “The second seat from the aisle,” he had told me excitedly. “I saved the best seats for you!”
But the cars were no longer there. One of them had been wadded up and pushed underneath the row ahead of it and torn into two pieces. The one with my name on it, Sarah Evans, was also torn in half.
“These seats were reserved for me.”
Brandon fidgeted awkwardly from one foot to another. “A woman wearing a blue dress told us that there was a mix-up with the seating arrangement.”
I followed his finger and there, in full view in the center of Row B, sat Chloe, my former husband’s twenty-eight year old third wife. When our eyes met, she smiled. And then she raised her cell phone to record me with her video camera.
It’s important for you to understand how those eighteen years felt.
David left when Michael was only six, saying he’d “outgrown” me. And he took the house but never paid child support. We moved into a small and freezing apartment above a Vietnamese restaurant. Michael had the one bedroom, and I had to sleep on the pull-out sofa in the living room.
In order to support us, I worked cleaning medical office buildings first thing in the morning and sewed alterations in the evening, sometimes past 2 or 3 o’clock in the morning. I lived by myself and bought only those things that were absolutely necessary. But I always made sure that Michael had whatever he needed.
Michael was very intelligent, and I would drive him to a special school every day for forty minutes each way, spending our weekends watching robotics competitions and math championships. During those twelve years, David came to two big events for all of fifteen minutes to take some photos. He skipped the sick days, the bullies, and the exhaustion, but he never missed a photo op.
That was precisely the reason I remained standing by the back doors after Chloe stole my place, refusing to give in to the social media video that she was making. I stood quietly near the doors and waited.
Earlier that day, Michael gave me a strong hug in the parking lot, saying, “I know precisely how hard you’ve worked for me.” And all I asked of him was, “Promise me you will not cry today because today will be a wonderful day.”
This day belonged to Michael, and Chloe was sitting in my place. Claire, my sister, was beside me, whispering angrily, “She literally took your seat.”
I shook my head at her words. “Today isn’t about her, it’s about Michael.”
“Now, I am delighted to present our class’s valedictorian for this year… Michael Evans!”
All of the audience erupted into applause. David jumped from his seat to clap wildly. Chloe immediately got her phone out to record the entire thing.
Michael took his place at the podium. He did not look down at David and Chloe; rather, he searched through the crowd of people and stared directly at the very last row of the room… directly at me.
He took out the piece of paper that had the speech written on it. After giving the sheets of paper a quick look, he carefully refolded them and placed them back into his pocket.
“I’ve prepared an entire speech for today,” he announced into the microphone. Everyone became silent immediately. “But I won’t be reading it. Because there was something that happened before the award ceremony that I can’t hold back on.”
Chloe slowly put her phone away, while Michael raised one hand and used his finger to point directly at her. Everyone in the room turned to stare.
“You honestly believe no one would notice what you had done,” he said in a loud voice. “And you truly believed that because you have money, you can just do whatever you please?”
Then he lifted something above his head and showed everyone, the ripped and wrinkled piece of paper with my name on it.
“Also, I’ve checked the surveillance camera,” Michael added. Then, his voice broke a tiny bit. “My mother held two jobs for eighteen years in order to bring me to where I’m at now. She got up early in the morning to clean the office buildings. She would work until very late at night. It’s only thanks to her that I’m standing up here today.”
But then, he gestured all the way to the back of the room. Straight at me.
Everyone in the room turned in their chairs at the same time. At last, all day long, no one was focusing on Chloe or David anymore. Everyone’s eyes were fixed upon me, standing silently below the exit sign.
And in that split second, I understood everything. Every single sacrifice I made along the way was worth it because Michael and I actually did it. And, my son had just made sure everyone in the room knew exactly who deserved the front-row seats.
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Bored Daddy
Love and Peace




