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My ex-husband’s new wife sent me to the back during my son’s graduation… but one sentence he said made the entire auditorium stand up.

Part 1 of 3

“Your place is not in the front row, Penelope. Leo already has a family that knows how to behave.”

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That was what Cynthia, my ex-husband’s new wife, told me in front of half the audience as if eighteen years of sleepless nights could be erased with a stolen chair.

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I remained still.

It was not because it didn’t hurt.

It hurt so much that I felt my throat close up completely.

But my son was behind the curtain, about to graduate from high school, and I was not going to turn the most important day of his life into a petty neighborhood squabble.

My name is Penelope Vance (Wait, no, I must choose another name)… My name is Penelope Foster, I am forty-three years old, and that morning I had ironed my blue dress twice.

It wasn’t a designer brand, as I had bought it on sale at a store in downtown Austin after finishing a double shift at the clinic where I work as a nursing assistant.

When I tried it on, I thought that Leo was going to think I looked beautiful in the photos.

My son, Leo Anderson, was graduating with honors from a private high school in the suburbs of San Antonio.

He had gotten in on a scholarship, through sheer hard work, perfect grades, and many nights studying while I sewed other people’s uniforms to cover his tuition fees.

A week earlier, he sent me a message: “Mom, I saved you a seat in the front row, left side, because I want to see you close by when they call my name.”

I replied with a heart emoji and cried in the clinic bathroom so no one would see me.

But when I arrived at the auditorium with my sister Susan, the seats were already taken.

In the front row, on the left, was Frank, my ex-husband, wearing an expensive suit and sporting the smile of an important man.

Next to him was Cynthia, in a beige dress, high heels, and with a triumphant expression, along with her mother, a cousin, and two men I didn’t even know.

On the back of a chair, I caught a glimpse of a piece of paper, half torn off, where my name was still legible: Penelope Foster.

I approached the young man in charge of the entrance.

“Excuse me, my son told me these places were for me and my sister,” I said.

The boy checked a list, looked at Cynthia, and lowered his voice while saying, “Ma’am, I was told those seats were for the father’s family, but you can stand in the back.”

Susan clutched the bouquet of sunflowers she was carrying and shouted, “Standing in the back? Are you even listening to what you are saying?”

Then Cynthia turned around, without shame and without lowering her voice, to say, “Leo doesn’t need any drama today, so if his mother wants to stay, she can watch the ceremony from the back as she should be used to by now.”

I felt like everyone was staring at me.

Perhaps it wasn’t true, but shame often makes any whisper sound like your own name.

Susan stepped forward and demanded, “Repeat that.”

I took her by the arm and pleaded, “No, Susan, not today.”

“Penelope, you cannot let that woman humiliate you,” my sister insisted.

“Not at my son’s graduation,” I replied firmly.

I looked at Frank, hoping at least that he would say something or that he would defend the place Leo had reserved for me, but he didn’t turn around.

He simply adjusted his jacket and looked at the stage, as if everything was in order and as if I truly belonged in the back.

I walked to the back of the auditorium with Susan, who was furious and trembling, and we stood by the wall under the red EXIT sign.

Without a chair, no program, and no place.

The ceremony began, and as they spoke of the effort, the dreams, and the families who support their children, I had to press my lips together to keep from crying.

Then the graduates entered, and I searched among the blue graduation caps until I found Leo.

He looked tall, serious, and handsome.

First, he looked toward the front row where Frank raised his hand and Cynthia smiled as if she had won something.

But Leo didn’t smile.

His eyes continued searching row by row until he found me at the bottom.

I tried to smile at him to tell him with my eyes that everything was alright.

But Leo stopped for half a second, and a look of pain appeared on his face that I will never forget.

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