I work two jobs to afford our tiny apartment that always smells like someone else’s dinner. I clean, open the windows—nothing helps.
By day, I ride a garbage truck or crawl into muddy holes with the sanitation crew. By night, I clean downtown offices that smell like lemon cleaner and other people’s success. The money comes and goes.
But my six-year-old daughter, Lily, makes it almost worthwhile. She remembers everything my exhausted brain forgets. She’s the reason I get up.
My mom lives with us too; she moves slowly but still braids Lily’s hair and makes her oatmeal every morning. Ballet isn’t just Lily’s hobby—watching her dance feels like fresh air. When she found a flyer for beginner ballet, she stared like it was magic. I knew the cost would be huge, but I said yes anyway. I skipped lunches and drank bad coffee, saving every spare bit just to pay for her classes.
The studio was full of polished parents and shiny bags. I sat in the corner, smelling like trash, pretending to be invisible. But Lily marched in like she belonged.
At home, our living room became her stage. My mom clapped offbeat, and I watched her practice arms and turns, no matter how tired I was.
The recital was Friday at 6:30. That afternoon, a water main broke. We showed up to chaos, and by 5:50 I was soaked and shaking. I told my supervisor I had to go—my daughter’s show. He let me go.
I ran, still wet and smelling like a flooded basement, through the subway and into the auditorium. Lily looked for me, panicked, until her eyes locked on my dirty sleeve raised in the back row. She danced with joy—wobbly at times, but radiant. I cried.
Afterward on the subway, a man watched us. When I called him out for taking a picture of my daughter, he apologized and deleted it.
The next morning, heavy knocks at the door brought two men and that same man from the train. He handed me an envelope. Inside was a scholarship for Lily’s dance at a better school, support for us, and a job offer for me with benefits.
He told me Lily reminded him of his daughter, Emma, whose recitals he regretted missing before she died. He said he promised her he’d show up for kids like mine.
The offer meant a steadier life—closer home, less struggle, better dance floors. Lily asked if they had bigger mirrors. They did. We toured the school and my new workplace. My mom and I read the contracts at night, looking for tricks that weren’t there.