The mention of her mother — Hannah, gone at twenty-six from a fentanyl-laced pill — still sent a cold twist through Lila’s stomach. She remembered almost nothing concrete anymore: just the ghost of vanilla perfume and the way Hannah used to sing off-key while braiding her hair.

“Grandma… are you sure you can’t come today?”

They’d had this conversation every morning for two weeks.

Nora finally lifted her cloudy gaze. “Baby, I’d give anything to be there. I’d crawl if these legs would let me. But the doctor was real clear — no crowds, no excitement, no extra strain on this tired old ticker.”

Lila remembered the last scare: the flashing lights, the oxygen mask, the social worker asking gentle questions that felt like traps. She never wanted to risk being taken away again.

“I know,” she whispered. “It’s okay.”

It wasn’t okay at all.

At Carver Primary, graduation wasn’t just a ceremony — it was a public performance of family. For weeks the teacher, Ms. Alvarez, had been collecting RSVP lists. Some children were bringing nine or ten relatives. Lila had quietly told Ms. Alvarez that Nora was coming. She couldn’t stand the pity that would follow the truth.