"Don't you have a girl your age?" another voice shouted.
"Sweetheart," she said quietly. "It's alright. I'll head home. You don't need all this. You need to enjoy the night."
She gave me a soft, apologetic look, like she was the one who had done something wrong.
Something inside me locked into place. Not anger exactly — just a kind of clarity I didn't know I had until that moment.
"No," I said. "Please don't go."
"You don't need all this. You need to enjoy the night."
I looked around the gym. Every table, every corner, every shimmering string light seemed to close in. People had stopped dancing. Some were whispering. Sasha was standing by the wall, watching us, her face unreadable.
"You told me once that you raised me to know what matters. Well, this matters," I said, turning to Grandma again.
She blinked, her mouth parting slightly.
"I'll be right back," I said.
People had stopped dancing.
Then I crossed the floor, weaving between couples and cutting straight to the DJ booth. Mr. Freeman, our math teacher turned part-time DJ, looked surprised as I approached.
"Lucas? Is something wrong?"
"I need the mic," I said, nodding once.
I crossed the floor, weaving between couples...
He hesitated for just a second, then handed it to me. I turned off the music myself. The room fell silent, like someone had physically pulled the sound out of the air.
"Before anyone laughs or pokes fun again... let me tell you who this woman is," I said, taking a deep breath.
I looked toward Gran, who was still standing alone, arms loosely at her sides.
The room fell silent.
"This is my grandmother, Doris. She raised me when no one else would. She scrubbed your classrooms at dawn so you could sit in clean seats. She's worked extra hard cleaning out the locker rooms so that you could shower in clean cubicles. She is the strongest person I know."
There was a hush so quiet, I could hear the whirring of the ceiling fan.
I caught Anthony in the corner, his face flushing red. I remembered Gran finding him drunk in the locker room two years ago — someone had smuggled a bottle of something into school. She helped him clean up, got him home safely, and never breathed a word of it.
"She raised me when no one else would."
His dad was on the school board.
I let the silence settle.
"And if you think dancing with her makes me pathetic," I paused, "then I truly feel sorry for you."
When I turned back to my grandmother, her eyes were brimming.
I let the silence settle.
I walked over and held out my hand again.
"Gran," I said. "May I have this dance?"
For a moment, she didn't move.
Then she nodded.
She placed her hand in mine.
For a moment, she didn't move.
At first, only one person clapped. Then another. And suddenly, the sound swept through the room like a wave. The laughter was gone. All that remained was applause.
Gran covered her mouth with her free hand, tears slipping quietly down her cheeks.
We danced beneath the string lights, while the whole room watched — not with mockery, but with respect.
The laughter was gone.
All that remained was applause.
For the first time in her life, she wasn't invisible.
She wasn't "the cleaning lady."
She was someone honored.
Later that night, Sasha walked up to me holding two paper cups of punch. She held one out, smiling in that way she did when she was trying not to make a big deal out of something that felt big anyway.
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