“He deserves one perfect night,” I told myself as I held the envelope of cash in my hands.
At the time, I thought it was love.
I thought I was doing what mothers are supposed to do.
I thought I was protecting my son.
I was wrong.
My son, Jeremiah, had always been the quiet child
Too quiet.
Every photograph from his childhood told the same story. Birthday parties, school events, class pictures… he was always standing slightly apart from everyone else, almost as if he was apologizing for taking up space.
I spent years convincing myself the world had failed him.
I saw every lonely lunch period, every awkward interaction, every silent disappointment as proof that people simply overlooked him.
So when prom season arrived, I became determined to give him something he had never experienced before.
One perfect night.
Ella seemed like the answer.
She was a shy girl from his school with kind eyes and a soft smile. I had heard her family was struggling financially and that her mother was months behind on rent.
In my mind, it felt simple.
I could help two young people at once.
I sent her a private message.
I carefully explained my offer.
One night at prom with Jeremiah.
In return, I would provide money that could help her family keep their home.
She hesitated.
Then she agreed.
The dress.
The makeup.
The hair appointment.
Every little detail.
On prom night, Ella arrived wearing a pale blue dress and carrying a small bouquet.
Her hands trembled.
I assumed she was nervous.
Then Jeremiah came downstairs wearing his tuxedo.
For one brief second, something flashed across his face.
It wasn’t happiness.
It wasn’t even gratitude.
It was satisfaction.
The expression vanished so quickly that I almost convinced myself I had imagined it.
Mothers become experts at ignoring the things they aren’t ready to accept.
I lined them up beside the rose bushes and took dozens of photographs.
At one point, Jeremiah leaned close to whisper something into Ella’s ear.
She flinched.
I blamed a bee in the garden.
“Smile, sweetheart,” I told her.
She tried.
Her eyes did not.
When they drove away in the limo, I stood in the driveway long after the taillights disappeared.
Inside, I poured myself a glass of wine and began looking through the pictures.
Something felt wrong.
Ella leaned away from him in nearly every image.
Her shoulders looked tense.
Her smile looked painful.
Still, I pushed the feeling aside.
Then my phone buzzed.
It was Mrs. Patterson, Jeremiah’s AP English teacher.
The message was short.
“Mrs. Carter, is this your son?”
A second message immediately followed.
“Come to the school. Now.”
Then she sent a photograph.
My heart stopped.
Jeremiah stood in a side hallway near the gym.
Ella was pressed against the wall.
She was crying.
Mascara streaked down her face.
And my son…
My son looked pleased.
I grabbed my keys and drove to the school.
Mrs. Patterson met me near the entrance.
She looked exhausted.
“He announced it to everyone,” she said quietly.
“Announced what?”
“That you paid Ella to come with him.”
The hallway suddenly felt too small.
She continued.