And some, too proud to bend even when they were clearly wrong, just lifted their chins and moved on. I let them. That wasn’t my weight anymore.
I spoke a few words when Mr. Bradley handed me the mic, just a few sentences, because anything longer and I wouldn’t have gotten through it.
“I made a promise a long time ago to make my dad proud. I hope I did. And if he’s watching from somewhere tonight, I want him to know that everything I’ve ever done right is because of him.”
That wasn’t my weight anymore.
That was all. It was enough.
After the music came back on, my aunt, who had been standing near the entrance the whole time without me knowing, found me and pulled me in without a word.
“I’m so proud of you,” she whispered.
That evening, she drove us to the cemetery. The grass was still damp from earlier in the day, and the light was going gold at the edges when we got there.