Outside, a car waited.
The officer turned to me, his voice gentler now. My father had planned that too. He didn’t want me to miss prom.
I stepped out into the night, the air cool against my skin, the weight of everything still settling inside me.
The man waiting by the car saluted me like I mattered.
And for the first time in a long time, I believed it.
At school, heads turned. Whispers followed.
I braced myself for more laughter.
But instead, someone clapped.
Then another.
And suddenly, the room filled with it.
Not pity. Not mockery.
Recognition.
I danced that night—not perfectly, not like the girls who had dreamed of it their whole lives—but freely. Like I had finally stepped into something that belonged to me.
Later, when I returned home, the house was quiet.
Suitcases by the stairs. Papers spread across the table. No laughter. No sharp voices.
Just stillness.
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