The Lunchroom Went Silent When A Politician’s Son Read The Poor Boy’s Note-thuyhien

My father did not walk toward me right away.

That was the first thing I remember clearly.

He stood beside Principal Harris under the cafeteria clock, one hand still resting on the folder he had brought for the donor luncheon, his campaign pin flashing under the fluorescent lights. His eyes stayed on the note in my hand. Then they moved to Lucas. Then to the stale bread on the table.

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The cafeteria had 300 students in it, but every tray, every chair leg, every whisper seemed to scrape against the floor at once.

My father took the microphone from Principal Harris.

Not roughly. Not dramatically.

He lifted it from her hand like he was accepting a glass of water.

“Ethan,” he said.

My name cracked through the speakers.

The phones around me stayed raised.

My fingers tightened around the note until the paper bent. Lucas was crouched near my shoes, trying to pick up the bread without touching me. His hands were small, dry, and red at the knuckles.

My father’s voice came again, flatter this time.

“Read the whole note.”

I looked down.

“I did,” I said, but the words barely moved.

My father did not blink.

“No. You performed the note. Now read it.”

Someone near the soda machine made a tiny sound and stopped. Principal Harris’s face had gone pale behind her glasses. Two teachers stood frozen near the tray return, both holding walkie-talkies, neither using them.

My throat closed around the first line.

Lucas stayed on the floor.

“Stand up, Lucas,” my father said into the microphone.

Lucas flinched like his own name hurt.

He rose slowly, clutching the bread to his chest. Crumbs stuck to the front of his faded polo. His backpack strap had slipped halfway down his arm, and the silver safety pin on the broken zipper trembled against the fabric.

My father pointed at the table.

“Ethan, down.”

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