Simon took a deep, shaky breath and fixed his gaze firmly on Joanna, pointedly ignoring Denise.
“When I was three weeks old, someone left me in the arms of a twenty-two-year-old girl who had just earned a life-changing scholarship,” he began, his voice thick with emotion.
“She could have walked away, she could have said no, and she could have lived the life she had worked so hard to build, but she stayed.”
Dorothy lowered her gaze to the floor, and George’s jaw tightened until his face turned a pale, sickly shade of grey.
Denise continued to record, but her hand began to tremble, blurring the image on her expensive screen.
“That woman worked at a local bookstore, cleaned offices, and studied under a flickering lamp at night whenever she could manage to keep her eyes open,” Simon continued, his eyes welling up with tears.
“She took me to the emergency room even when she did not have enough cash in her wallet for a bus ride, and she taught me how to read long before I ever set foot in a classroom.”
Joanna could no longer hold back the flood of tears, and her friend Sarah reached out to squeeze her hand tightly in support.
Simon reached under his graduation gown and pulled out a scrap of worn, yellow fabric that had clearly been washed a thousand times.
“This was my first blanket, and Joanna kept it all these years along with my hospital bracelet, my childhood sketches, and even a scribbled note I wrote when I was six where I accidentally called her mom,” he said, holding it up for everyone to see.
A wave of murmurs rippled through the auditorium, a collective gasp of realization washing over the parents and faculty.
Denise abruptly turned off her phone, the screen going black.
“Simon, please, stop this right now,” Dorothy whispered urgently from her seat, but her plea went completely unheard.
Simon did not stop, his eyes burning with a righteous fire he had kept hidden for years.
“A week ago, while I was searching for old photos for my graduation video, I found something tucked inside a forgotten shoebox in the attic.”
He pulled out a wrinkled envelope, and Joanna felt a sudden chill, immediately recognizing the jagged, hurried handwriting of her sister.
Simon opened the envelope and read the contents aloud, his voice devoid of any warmth.
“Mariana, do not look for me unless it is a dire emergency, because you are better suited for these things, and I really need to go live my own life.”
The silence in the room became thick and suffocating, nearly impossible to bear.
Jonathan, the man who had accompanied Denise, pulled his arm away and looked at her with a mix of shock and total disbelief.
“Did you actually write that to her?” he whispered, his voice cutting through the quiet like a knife.
Denise desperately tried to summon her usual, practiced smile, but her face simply wouldn’t obey her.
“She was so young, she was just incredibly confused and overwhelmed by the situation,” she stammered, looking frantically at the crowd for an ally who was not there.
Simon looked at her for the first time, his expression filled with a haunting, quiet sadness.
“Joanna was young too, and she never once asked for permission to be the person who saved me,” he said, and that phrase hit the room harder than any shout ever could.
“Where were you when I had that severe allergic reaction in the third grade?” Simon demanded, stepping closer to the edge of the stage.
“Where were you when we could not afford the registration fee and Joanna had to sell the only piece of jewelry she owned to make sure I could attend classes?”
Denise opened her mouth to argue, but no words came out, as if her voice had been stolen by the weight of her own history.
The cake remained on Dorothy’s lap, the red icing melting and beginning to stain the cardboard box, turning the words “real mother” into a smudged, ugly smear of regret.
Simon stepped off the stage, holding the tattered yellow blanket in one hand and the letter in the other, walking straight toward Joanna.
Denise scrambled to her feet and stepped into his path, desperately trying to reassert her authority.
“I am your mother, Simon, I am the one who brought you into this world!” she hissed, trying to reclaim the narrative.
Simon stopped, his face stone cold.
“Yes, you brought me into the world, but everyone in this room needs to know why you really came back here today.”
Part 3: The Breaking Point
Denise turned deathly pale, looking like a young child who had been caught in a terrible, elaborate lie.
“I have no idea what you are talking about, you are just trying to hurt me,” she murmured, though her voice lacked any real conviction.
Simon reached into his pocket and pulled out yet another folded document.
“Last week, I received a phone call from a law firm in the city, and they told me they wanted to verify my information because my grandfather left an educational trust in my name that nobody ever mentioned to me.”