Graduation day was supposed to be one of the happiest days of my life.
I sat among hundreds of graduates in a packed stadium while families cheered from every direction.
Parents waved signs, took photos, and celebrated years of hard work finally paying off.
But my eyes kept returning to the same place.
Three empty seats in Section 104.
Those seats belonged to my mom, dad, and younger sister Brooke.
They had promised they would be there.
The night before, my mother told me they wouldn’t miss it for anything.
Yet as the ceremony started, those seats remained empty.
I checked my phone again and again.
Finally, a text from Mom appeared.
“Sweetie, we’re so sorry. Brooke had a meltdown this morning. She locked herself in her room and refused to come out. We had to stay and help her. We’ll celebrate with you later.”
I stared at the message while names were called around me.
Brooke was twenty years old.
This wasn’t an emergency.
This wasn’t a crisis.
It was another tantrum.
And once again, my life had been pushed aside to make room for hers.
When my name echoed through the stadium, I walked across the stage alone.
No cheers.
No family photos.
No proud faces waiting afterward.
That night, while my parents focused on calming Brooke, I sat in my apartment staring at my diploma.
For the first time, I stopped feeling angry.
I felt finished.
Something inside me finally broke.
By sunrise, I had made a decision that would change my family’s life forever. And they wouldn’t realize what I’d done until it was already too late.