You’re doing it perfectly, sweetheart.”
She smiled and spun again.
Rosie had mosaic Down syndrome. Most strangers didn’t notice it immediately. But kids at school always noticed something. And some of them had spent years making sure she knew she was different.
I remembered the torn sleeve she claimed had caught on a locker.
The stuffed bear someone had drawn on with permanent marker.
The tears she tried to hide when I asked how school had gone.
“Fine,” she’d always say.
Just fine.
Now she was getting ready for prom.
And not just any prom.
The school’s star quarterback had asked her.
Steven Parker.
The boy whose name echoed through the football stadium every Friday night.
Three weeks earlier, he had shown up at our front door carrying a single white tulip.
He looked Rosie directly in the eyes.
“Would you go to prom with me?”
I was so shocked I answered before she could.
“Yes.”
Then I immediately apologized and let Rosie answer for herself.
My sister Megan cried when she heard the news.
“She deserves this,” she said. “Please let yourself enjoy it.”
I wanted to.
I really did.
But something kept bothering me.
Why Rosie?
Why would a popular athlete choose my daughter when he could have invited anyone?
The question lingered no matter how hard I tried to ignore it.
“Mom?”
Rosie stopped dancing.
“You’re making your worried face.”
“What worried face?”
“The one where your eyebrows get all twisty.”
I laughed despite myself.
“Come here. Let’s get you dressed.”
A few minutes later, I zipped up her pale blue gown and stepped back.
She looked beautiful.
Not because of the dress.
Not because of the makeup.
Because she looked happy.
Truly happy.
“You look like a princess,” I told her.
Her eyes widened.
“Really?”
“Really.”
When we arrived at the prom venue, the gymnasium looked like something out of a fairy tale. Twinkling lights hung from the ceiling. Blue and silver decorations shimmered across the walls.
Then Steven arrived.
He walked directly toward Rosie.
Every conversation in the room seemed to fade away.
He stopped in front of her and bowed dramatically.
“May I have this dance?”
Rosie’s face lit up.
“Yes,” she whispered.
Steven gently took her hand.
The music started.
And together they stepped onto the dance floor.
I watched them move slowly across the room.
One-two-three, turn.
One-two-three, turn.
Exactly the way she’d practiced.
For the first time in weeks, I started believing maybe I had been wrong.
Maybe Steven really was just a kind kid.
Then everything changed.
While they danced, Steven draped his tuxedo jacket across a chair near my table.
A few minutes later, it slipped onto the floor.
I bent down to pick it up.
As I lifted it, something poked through the inside pocket.
Curiosity got the better of me.
Inside was a flash drive.
A thick stack of photographs.
And a red envelope.
Across the front were four words written in black marker.
AFTER THEY LAUGH.
My stomach dropped.
I pulled out the photographs.
The first one showed Rosie crying inside a bathroom stall.
The second showed her holding her torn jacket.
The third showed her sitting alone in the cafeteria.
My hands started shaking.
“Don’t.”
The voice came from beside me.
I looked up.
Steven stood there.
His smile had vanished.
“Put them back,” he said quietly.
“Why do you have these?”
“You need to trust me.”
“Trust you?”
His eyes didn’t leave mine.
“Please.”
“If this is some kind of joke—”
“It isn’t.”
His voice was calm.
Almost sad.
“Just wait.”
“If you hurt my daughter,” I whispered, “I swear you’ll regret it.”
He nodded.
“I know.”
Then he walked away.
Not toward Rosie.
Toward the stage.
Fear exploded inside me.
I started after him.
But two football players stepped into my path.
“Please wait,” one said.
“No.”
“Just one minute.”
“You don’t understand.”
The taller boy looked directly at me.
“Actually, I think we do.”
Then Steven climbed onto the stage.
The music stopped.