Graduation Empty Seats, A £1 Transfer, And Police At My Door-heuh

No one came to my graduation, and for three days I kept finding new ways to pretend that it had not hurt.

I told myself the hall had been crowded anyway.

I told myself I was too old to care who clapped.

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I told myself plenty of people had complicated families, and that mine was not special, not tragic, not worth making a fuss over.

But every time I passed the gown hanging beside the door of my flat, the truth brushed my shoulder.

They had not come.

Not Mum.

Not Dad.

Not Avery.

The one day I had spent years building towards had passed with three empty seats sitting where my family should have been.

The ceremony itself had been almost painfully bright.

The sort of bright that made everyone look washed clean and important.

Parents dabbed their eyes with tissues.

Grandparents leaned forward with their phones held too high.

Someone’s little brother kept cheering before the names were finished, and everybody laughed because joy makes people generous.

I sat in my row with my hands folded over my programme, feeling the glossy paper soften where my thumbs pressed too hard.

When my name was called, I stood.

“Camila Elaine Reed, Master of Data Analytics.”

For half a second, I forgot everything I knew.

I looked towards the family section as if hope were a reflex I had not managed to kill.

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