They Wanted VIP Seats After Abandoning Her. Then Her Real Name Was Called-eirian

My parents abandoned me in a hospital when I was thirteen because my cancer treatment was too expensive.

That is not a metaphor.

That is not something I say because I am angry and want the story to sound sharper than it was.

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It happened under fluorescent lights, with a hospital bracelet scratching my wrist and a doctor trying very hard to keep his voice gentle.

Fifteen years later, those same parents demanded VIP seats at my medical school graduation.

They did not ask if I was comfortable with it.

They did not ask if I wanted to see them.

They contacted the university and claimed to be my parents, as if biology were a lifetime pass they could pull from a drawer whenever my success became useful.

By then, I was not Emily Parker anymore.

I was Dr. Emily Rivera.

The first time I saw Karen and Richard Parker after fifteen years, they were sitting in the premium section at Madison Square Garden, pretending they belonged among proud families of graduating doctors.

The arena was bright and loud in the way big ceremonies always are before they begin.

Programs rustled.

Graduates laughed too hard backstage because nerves needed somewhere to go.

A coordinator with a clipboard kept whispering names into a headset.

The air smelled like coffee, hairspray, paper, and steam from the concession stands drifting somewhere beyond the curtain.

I stood in my doctoral robe behind the heavy black drape and watched the two people who had left me for dead take the best seats in the house.

My mother looked older than I remembered.

She was thin and stiff in a cream jacket, her hair sprayed into place, her mouth set in a proud little curve that had once fooled teachers, neighbors, and church acquaintances into thinking she was a devoted mother.

My father wore a dark suit and kept flipping through the ceremony program.

He dragged one finger down the list of names, stopped, frowned, and started again.

He was searching for Parker.

Two seats away sat Megan Rivera.

She wore an emerald green dress and held yellow roses in her lap.

Her hands were trembling around the stems.

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