Applause broke out in the crowd.
My mother’s face went pale, and that’s when she revealed the true reason she’d come for me that day.
Nobody was going to help her take me away from Dad.
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“You don’t understand!” Tears streamed down her face. “I’m dying.”
The applause stopped instantly.
“I have leukemia,” Liza continued. “The doctors say my best chance is a bone marrow match. You’re the only family I have left.”
Whispers spread through the stands again. Some people looked angry.
One woman muttered loudly enough that I could hear her: “She has no right to ask that.”
My mother sank to her knees right there on the grass, in front of everyone, in the middle of my graduation.
“You’re the only family I have left.”
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“Please,” she begged. “I know I don’t deserve it, but I’m begging you to save my life.”
I looked at my dad. He didn’t answer for me. He never did.
He just placed a hand on my shoulder. “You don’t owe her anything. But no matter what you decide, I’ll support you.”
Even then, standing in the ruins of the secret he’d carried for 18 years, he was still making space for me to choose.
I realized something important then: everything important I’d learned about life came from him, anyway. I never needed him to tell me what to do because he’d been showing me how to live a good life every day.
“I know I don’t deserve it, but I’m begging you to save my life.”
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I turned back to my mother. “I’ll get tested.”
The crowd murmured again. Liza put her hands over her face.
I squeezed my dad’s hand hard. “Not because you’re my mother, but because he raised me to do the right thing, even when it’s hard.”
My dad wiped his eyes.
He didn’t even try to pretend he wasn’t crying that time.
“He raised me to do the right thing, even when it’s hard.”