End Part: My ex’s new wife stole my seat at my son’s graduation. “His mother can watch from the back. She should be used to it by now,” she laughed. My ex did nothing. After working double shifts for 18 years to raise the valedictorian

“We can both say it,” he replied, kissing my forehead. “Go home. Go rest. It’s your turn now.”

It took a few months of living in the deafening quiet of my apartment to figure out what “my turn” actually meant. But when I remembered the feeling of standing in the back of that auditorium, I finally knew. At forty-two, I filled out the FAFSA and enrolled in the accelerated nursing program.

Two grueling years later, I stood in a different auditorium, wearing a crisp, white uniform. My feet ached from walking hospital floors, not from cleaning them.

When my name was called—Sarah Evans, Licensed Practical Nurse—I walked across the brightly lit stage. I didn’t look at the back wall. I looked directly down at the absolute center of the very front row.

Michael was sitting there, wearing a sharp suit, cheering louder than anyone. Taped to his chair was a paper he had printed himself: Reserved for Michael Evans, Proud Son of the Front Row.

I lifted my certificate high. I looked right at the boy who taught me how to stop hiding.

For you, I mouthed.

He shook his head, pressing a hand to his chest. For us, he mouthed back.