Four Empty Seats At My Graduation Changed Everything In Public-ngyen

By the time I understood my family were not coming, the stadium had already become too loud to breathe in.

It was full of the kind of noise people make when they are proud without apology.

There were bouquets wrapped in brown paper, parents standing on tiptoe, younger siblings waving too hard, and graduates turning round every few seconds to check that their people were still watching.

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The air smelt of roses, warm stone, perfume, damp coats, and somebody’s coconut sunscreen drifting across the rows.

I sat in the front section with a doctoral gown heavy on my shoulders and four reserved seats beside me.

Four clean, empty chairs.

Not one late arrival.

Not one bag left to save a place.

Just four gaps with my family name attached to them.

I am Clara Evans, and I was twenty-eight years old on the day I officially finished medical school.

For years, I had imagined that moment with embarrassing softness.

I had pictured my mother dabbing at her eyes with a tissue she would deny needing.

I had pictured my father clearing his throat in that awkward way men do when they are proud but do not want to look sentimental.

I had even pictured Tiffany, my younger sister, rolling her eyes but filming me anyway because she filmed everything.

Instead, they were on a Caribbean cruise.

Tiffany had reached 10,000 followers online, and she had decided she needed a trip for content.

My parents had agreed.

They had chosen poolside photographs over my graduation, and they had done it with the calm confidence of people who were used to me absorbing the insult without making a scene.

At 1:17 p.m., my phone buzzed inside the sleeve of my robe.

I knew before I looked that it would hurt.

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