I thought my daughter’s prom night would finally give her one perfect memory. Then Ryan brought her home pale and shaken, and the truth I had buried for twelve years stood between us. I had five minutes to confess before he did, but I already knew one lie had cost us everything.
My daughter came home from prom with the boy every girl at school wanted.
She was still glowing like the night had not finished with her yet.
Ryan held her heels and his tux jacket. Iris, my girl, was breathless and flushed, smiling as if life had given her something she had stopped asking for.
Then she went to the kitchen to get him a glass of water.
The second she disappeared, Ryan turned to me.
His smile was gone.
“You have five minutes,” he said.
I gripped the hallway table. “Excuse me, Ryan?”
His voice stayed low.
“Five minutes to tell Iris the truth, Jane. Ma’am. Or I will.”
And just like that, the worst thing I had ever done as a mother walked into my house wearing a black tuxedo.
***
Earlier that afternoon, Iris had sat in front of my vanity mirror while I pinned the last curl into her hair.
“Stop moving, then, or I might curl your ear.”
She narrowed her eyes.
“Please don’t joke with a curling iron near my head.”
I smiled and fixed the curl anyway.
Iris had pretended for months not to care whenever Ryan texted.
Ryan was the boy every girl wanted: football captain, honor student, and polite enough to lower mothers’ guards.
“Do I look okay?” she asked.
“You look beautiful, sweetheart.”
She touched the strap of her dress. “I feel like something is missing.”
I knew what she meant before she said it.
“Nothing’s missing,” I said.
She looked down. “Do you think Dad would recognize me now?”
Iris glanced up.
“Sorry. Bad topic.”
“No,” I said. “Tonight is about dancing and pictures.”
“I just wonder sometimes,” she whispered.
“If he ever thinks about me on big days.”
“He made his choice, Iris.”
She nodded because she had heard that sentence her whole life.
“He didn’t want the responsibility,” she said. “I know the drill, Mom.”
“That’s his loss, my darling.”
The lie came out smoothly because old lies knew the shape of my mouth.
The doorbell rang.
Iris jumped up. “He’s here!”
“I’ll stall him for two minutes while you get your shoes on.”
“Don’t interrogate him.”
“No promises.”
Ryan stood on our porch in a tux, holding flowers.
“Good evening, Ms.
Jane.”
“Just Jane is fine. Come in.”
“I promise I’ll have her home by midnight,” he said.
“Eleven fifty-nine. At midnight, I start calling hospitals.”
He smiled.
“Yes, ma’am.”
Then Iris came down the stairs.
Ryan forgot how to speak.
“Wow,” he said softly. “You look beautiful.”
Iris blushed. “You look very…
tuxedo. I’m sorry. I don’t know why I said that.”
For a few minutes, everything felt normal.
I took too many pictures, and Ryan opened the car door for her.
I watched until their taillights disappeared.
Hours later, my phone buzzed.
“Mom!
You’re never going to believe what just happened!”
I smiled while replying.
“What? Is everything okay?”
Her reply came fast.
“I’ll tell you when I get home. It’s…
crazy.”
“Good crazy or bad crazy, Iris? Are you safe?”
By midnight, I had worn a path between the couch and the window.
At 12:07, headlights swept across the curtains, and I opened the door before they reached the porch.
“Iris?”
She came in first, eyes bright and wild.
“Mom, something happened tonight, and I don’t even know how to explain it.”
“No. It was just weird.”
Ryan came in behind her.
He was pale.
Iris dropped her shoes by the stairs.
“Ryan’s stepdad showed up at prom.”
My stomach tightened.
“Okay. And?”
“He surprised Ryan. He flew back early from work because he wanted to see him in his tux before the night ended.
It was sweet at first. Ryan introduced me, and his stepdad froze. Like, completely froze.
He kept asking my name. Then he asked about you. Well, about my parents.”
My fingers curled around the doorframe.
“What was his name?”
Iris frowned.
“Tony.”
The room narrowed.
“Mom?” Iris said.
“Sorry. I swallowed wrong.”
“No, you didn’t,” Ryan said, looking at me.
Iris glanced between us. “Ryan, do you want water?
You have barely spoken since we left.”