The Morning of the Assembly
After he left, Claire sat alone in her office for a long time.
She had spent years imagining what it might feel like if life ever placed Mark in front of her again. She had imagined the sharp satisfaction of a clear and clean reversal of power.
What she felt instead was more complicated than that.
There was fear — not of him, but of walking back into that memory in a room full of people. Of hearing what had happened described out loud, in the open, where it could not be softened or redirected. Of finding out whether the closure she had been carrying as a concept would actually arrive when the moment came, or whether it would simply watch from a distance while she ached.
The next morning she walked into her old high school just before the assembly began.
The building looked almost exactly the same as it had the day she left it. The same floors. The same particular institutional smell. The same feeling that something had been preserved there that might have been better released years ago.
The principal greeted her warmly near the auditorium entrance, thanked her for participating in the school’s anti-bullying initiative, and said it meant a great deal to the students.
Claire smiled politely and said nothing else.
The auditorium was full. Students filled the seats in long rows. Parents and teachers lined the walls. Local board members sat near the front. A banner stretched the width of the stage.
She found a position near the back, arms folded, where she could watch without being drawn into the center of things before she was ready.
Offstage, Mark was pacing.
He looked exactly the way she had expected him to look. Not broken. Not weak. Just completely exposed, the way a person looks when they are about to say something true in front of a large crowd for the first time in their life.
When the principal stepped to the microphone and introduced him as a guest speaker with a personal story about accountability and change, the room offered polite, routine applause.
He walked to the podium like a man approaching something he could not avoid.
Claire watched from the back and waited to see whether he would find a way to soften it.
He cleared his throat.
Then he began.
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