They Abandoned Their Sick Daughter, Then Saw Her Walk Onstage-heuh

At my graduation ceremony, the parents who walked away while I was battling can/cer showed up in the reserved section like they had earned the right to clap.

They sat beneath the bright lights at Duke with printed programs in their laps, smooth clothes on their bodies, and the kind of calm expression people wear when they believe the past is too far away to accuse them.

My mother, Karen Higgins, looked almost proud.

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My father, Thomas Higgins, looked impatient.

He kept sliding his thumb down the program, reading names, stopping, then starting again.

Two seats away from them sat Laura Davidson, the woman who actually raised me.

She wore a navy dress she had bought on sale, and I knew that because she had texted me a picture from the dressing room three days earlier with the caption, Is this too plain for a doctor’s mom?

It was not too plain.

It was perfect.

She held a bouquet from the grocery store, yellow roses and white daisies wrapped in clear plastic, and she kept pressing the flowers to her chest like she needed something to hold on to.

Her eyes were already wet before the processional music began.

My father glanced at her once.

Then he looked away.

That was always his gift.

He could dismiss a person before learning their name.

He did not know that Laura was the person who sat beside my hospital bed when I was thirteen and bald and too weak to lift my own water cup.

He did not know she was the one who painted my bedroom lavender.

He did not know she was the one who signed the school forms, remembered the scan dates, learned which soup I could keep down, and held my hand through the years when surviving felt like a job I had not applied for.

He only knew that I was standing backstage in a white coat.

He only knew that my name was printed in the program with an honor beside it.

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