People who have spent years being underestimated should never waste the moment when a room begins to understand it has been wrong.
I walked the center aisle like I had every right to it.
Past the donors.
Past the wives.
Past the men who had bowed their heads.
Past my sister’s table.
Past Trent, who actually leaned back a little as I went by, instinct finally whispering that he had misjudged the scale of his problem.
I mounted the stage steps and entered the light.
My father leaned away from the microphone and hissed, “Sit down.”
I didn’t answer.
“Joselyn,” he said under his breath, “do not do this.”
I stepped close enough to take the microphone.
He tried to hold it.
Not hard. Just enough to assert ownership.
I twisted my wrist once, clean and firm, and took it from him.
Feedback bit through the speakers.
Several people flinched.
My father stared at his empty hand.
He had never looked older to me than he did in that second.
I turned to the audience.
The room was silent enough for breath to count.
I lifted the microphone and said, “Amen.”
One word.
That was all it took.
It moved through the ballroom like a crack through ice.
Then I looked at my father.
“You’re right,” I said. “I failed.”