It had always been just the two of us—Dad and me.
My mom died giving birth to me, so my dad, Johnny, did everything himself. He packed my lunches before heading to work, flipped pancakes every Sunday without fail, and sometime around second grade he taught himself to braid hair by watching YouTube tutorials.
He was also the janitor at the same school I attended, which meant years of hearing exactly what everyone thought about that.
“That’s the janitor’s daughter… Her dad scrubs our toilets.”
I never cried in front of them. I saved that for when I got home.
Dad always knew anyway. He’d place a plate in front of me at dinner and say, “You know what I think about people who try to make themselves feel big by making someone else feel small?”
“Yeah?” I’d ask, my eyes watery.
“Not much, sweetie… not much.”
And somehow, that always made things feel a little better.
Dad told me honest work was something to be proud of. I believed him. And somewhere around sophomore year, I made a quiet promise to myself: I was going to make him proud enough to erase every nasty comment people had ever made.
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