He Took the Graduation Mic After His Mom Was Sent to the Back-hihehu

The auditorium smelled like floor polish, flowers, and money.

Laura Bennett noticed all three before she even found the aisle.

The floor had been buffed until the overhead lights shone in soft white streaks across it.

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Tall flower arrangements stood on either side of the stage, elegant and pale, the kind of arrangements that looked temporary but expensive.

Around her, parents moved in small shining clusters, smoothing jackets, checking phones, comparing parking headaches, pretending not to glance at one another’s clothes.

Laura smoothed the sleeve of her navy dress.

It was not new in the way most of the dresses in that room were new.

It had come from a clearance rack at a discount store after a shift that had left her feet swollen and her lower back aching.

The fabric was soft from being tried on too many times before she bought it, and one seam near the waist had started to pucker, but it was clean.

It was hers.

And it was the best she could do.

Her sister Maria walked beside her, holding a small purse under one arm and scanning the rows the way she scanned every room where Laura might be hurt.

“Front row,” Maria said, nudging her gently. “Your boy said front row.”

Laura smiled despite herself.

Three days earlier, at 11:17 p.m., Ethan had texted her while she was hiding in a hospital bathroom between rounds.

Mom, I saved you seats right in the front row. I want the first person I see to be you.

Laura had read it twice.

Then a third time.

Then she had locked the stall door and cried with one hand pressed over her mouth because the automatic hand dryer outside kept roaring every few seconds, and for once she was grateful for the noise.

She had worked so many twelve-hour shifts that month that the charge nurse had told her to slow down before her body made the decision for her.

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