She Cut Up His Graduation Gown—Then The Principal Called His Name-Tep

The phone rang at 2:17 p.m., while my office still smelled like stale coffee, printer heat, and the dry dust that gathers on blueprints after too many hours under fluorescent light.

I remember the time because the call came at the exact moment I was circling a structural issue near the east entrance of the Morrison Center, trying to decide whether the contractor had missed it or hoped I would.

The screen said Drew Griffin.

Image

My son.

For one quiet second, I smiled.

Graduation was that evening, and Drew had spent the whole week pretending he was too calm to care, which usually meant he cared more than he wanted anyone to see.

I expected him to ask whether I had remembered the camera, or whether I knew what time the doors opened, or whether I could bring the tie he had left at my apartment after dinner the Sunday before.

I answered with the kind of warmth a father keeps ready for a child who is trying to sound grown.

“Hey, buddy.”

What came back was not a joke or a question.

It was sobbing.

Not the irritated kind teenagers use when the world inconveniences them.

Not the embarrassed kind they swallow quickly because they are afraid someone else might hear.

This was raw, panicked, breathless crying, the kind that made the office around me shrink until there was nothing left but the sound of my son falling apart.

“Dad,” he said. “She destroyed them.”

I was already straightening in my chair.

“Slow down,” I said. “What happened?”

“Mom cut up my cap and gown.”

His voice broke so hard that I barely recognized it.

“It’s all over my bed. She left a note.”

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *