The usher looked barely out of high school. His name tag read Brandon, and he could not quite meet my eyes.
“Ma’am, I’m sorry, but those seats in the front are no longer available. You’ll have to stand back here.”
I tightened my grip on the graduation program. From the back of the auditorium, I could clearly see Row B. Two chairs. Two reserved name cards. I had watched my son place them there himself earlier that morning after hugging me in the parking lot.
“Front row, second seat from the aisle,” he had said with a smile. “I saved the best spot for you.”
Now the cards were gone. Not completely gone. One of them lay beneath the row ahead, torn neatly in half. My name, Sarah Evans, written in Michael’s careful blue marker, split straight down the middle.
“Those were my seats,” I said quietly. “My son reserved them.”
Brandon shifted uncomfortably.
“The woman in the blue dress said there was a seating mistake.”
I followed his gaze. There sat Chloe, my ex-husband David’s third wife, twenty-eight years old, dressed in an expensive cobalt-blue dress, sitting directly in the center of Row B as though she had always belonged there.
She turned slowly, spotted me standing at the back, and smiled. It was not a friendly smile. It was the kind of smile that says, I know exactly what I did.
Then she lifted her phone and angled it toward me. She was recording. Before I tell you what happened next, you need to understand the eighteen years that came before it. Otherwise, you might think I was weak for not walking down that aisle and demanding my seat back. I was not weak. I was careful. And from the outside, careful often looks exactly like weakness.
David left when Michael was six years old.