My classmates made fun of my birthmark for years, and by senior year, I had already accepted that no boy would ever ask me to prom. Then the most popular boy in school reached for my hand and changed everything. But when police officers walked into the gym looking for him, my whole world broke apart.
The hallways at my high school always seemed to stretch farther whenever I had to walk through them.
I kept my gaze lowered to the floor, my dark hair brushed across the left side of my face to hide the birthmark that spread over my cheek like a map of a place nobody wanted to see.
At 17, I had become very good at disappearing.
I headed home to the small apartment Mom and I shared. Mom worked two jobs, and most nights, I heard the front door click open long after midnight.
That Tuesday, she was actually home for dinner, which almost never happened. She placed a plate of spaghetti in front of me and lowered herself into the chair with a tired sigh.
“Hannah, sweetheart, you’ve barely touched your food.”
“I’m not hungry, Mom.”
She looked at my face with that quiet attention only mothers have. “Is it school again?”
I shrugged. “They put up the prom posters today. Brittany was handing out the tickets like she owned the place.”
My mother’s lips pressed together. She knew Brittany’s name. Brittany had bullied me for years and somehow always escaped consequences. I suspected it had something to do with the fact that she had led the cheerleading team to a state championship.
I pushed a noodle around my plate. “Mom, I don’t want to go to prom. I really don’t.”
She reached across the table and squeezed my hand. “Hannah, listen to me. You only get one senior prom. Just one. Give yourself one good memory before you graduate. Please.”
“A good memory,” I repeated quietly. “Mom, the only memory I’d make is being the girl in the corner.”
“Then stand in the middle of the room for once,” she said softly. “Just once.”
I did not answer. I just kept staring down at my plate.
The next morning, my bestie, Megan, was waiting for me at the bus stop with her backpack hanging from one shoulder. She was the only person in that school who truly cared about me.
“You look like you didn’t sleep,” she said.
“My mom’s pushing the prom thing.”
“Of course she is. Moms always do.”
I almost laughed.
When we reached school, I went straight to my locker. I turned the lock, opened the door, and pulled out my history textbook. Then I shut it.
And there he was.
Caleb was standing beside my locker, hands tucked into his pockets, his usual easy smile softened into something almost nervous. The football jacket, the dark eyes, the impossible image of him standing right next to me.
I froze. The most popular boy in school did not usually stop by my locker.
“Hey, Hannah,” he said. “I wanted to ask you something.”
“Yes?” I waited, my heart doing something foolish inside my chest.
“Would you go to prom with me?”
I stared at Caleb, convinced I must have heard him wrong. The noise in the hallway faded into a dull sound behind my ears.
“You want me to go to prom with you?”
He smiled and leaned one shoulder against the lockers as if this were completely normal.
“Yeah. I do.”
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