Every morning, I looked in the mirror before work and saw the same face staring back.
The left side still carried what the fire had taken twenty years earlier. The scars crossed my cheek, traced my jaw, and disappeared down my neck in rough, uneven lines. Makeup softened them, but it never erased them.
After two decades, I had learned to live with the stares. I knew the difference between curiosity and cruelty. I knew when people were startled, and I knew when they were unkind. I thought I had grown strong enough for all of it.
Then my daughter asked me not to come to her school anymore.
Clara was eleven, soft-hearted and bright, the kind of child who used to touch the scar near my neck and ask, “Does it hurt, Mom?”
I always told her no.
One afternoon, I picked her up from school myself. I saw her standing with a group of kids near the curb. A boy looked toward my car, whispered something, and the others started laughing.
Clara’s shoulders tightened before she even reached me.
She got into the passenger seat, dropped her backpack too hard, and turned toward the window.
“What happened?” I asked.
“Nothing.”
Then, after a long silence, she whispered, “Mom, can you please stop coming to my school?”