I Wanted to Impress My Classmates at Our 20-Year Reunion, So I Hired a Handsome Actor to Be My Plus-One – What Happened There Left Everyone Speechless

“Is that true?”

“You’re seriously asking me that?” she snapped.

Norton turned to me and held out the microphone.

“Daphne should finish the rest.”

Miriam laughed.

“She won’t say anything. She never does.”

I climbed the steps and took the microphone.

PART 3
“I teach literature,” I said. “This week, I taught my students about unreliable narrators.”

Miriam scoffed.

“Oh, please.”

“An unreliable narrator hides the truth,” I continued. “Sometimes by lying. Sometimes by leaving things out. Sometimes by smiling while handing everyone a twisted version of someone else.”

The room went quiet.

“In high school, Miriam told people I thought I was better than them because I liked books. She said I was cold because I was shy. She said I was stuck-up because I didn’t know how to defend myself.”

Miriam folded her arms.

“You were stuck-up.”

“No,” I said. “I was scared.”

For once, she had no quick answer.

So I kept going.

“Then Mark married me, and Miriam gave him a new story. She told him I was judgmental, cold, and impossible to love.”

Mark looked up.

“Daphne. Not here.”

“Yes, Mark. Here.”

His jaw tightened.

“This isn’t fair.”

I almost laughed.

“You mean public? Because unfair was coming home to a husband who had already put me on trial. She lied because that is what she does. But you believed her because it was easier than asking me for the truth.”

He flinched.

Miriam stepped forward.

“Don’t blame me because your marriage failed.”

I turned to her.

“I blamed myself for years. You don’t get that gift anymore.”

Her face hardened.

“For years, I thought Miriam stole you,” I told Mark. “Tonight, I finally understand. She only opened the door. You walked through it.”

Miriam’s eyes filled with angry tears.

“You’re all listening to this?” she cried. “She paid a man to stand beside her!”

“Yes,” I said. “I did. I hired Norton because I was afraid to walk into this room alone. Not because I needed a man to make me valuable, but because I needed one person beside me who had not already been told I was worthless. I had no idea he knew you.”

A woman near the photo booth stood.

“She did it to me too,” she said. “She told everyone I cheated on my scholarship essay. I didn’t.”

A man near the punch table added, “She told people I got my job because my uncle pulled strings.”

Mark turned slowly toward Miriam.

“How much of what you told me about Daphne was true?”

Miriam grabbed his sleeve.

“You’re choosing her now?”

I raised the microphone.

“No. He doesn’t get to choose me now.”

Beth, the reunion chair, stepped onto the stage and picked up the printed program.

“Miriam,” she said, “you’re not giving the closing toast.”

Miriam froze.

“You can’t do that.”

“I just did.”

Beth looked at me.

“Daphne, would you be willing?”

I saw Norton in the crowd, quietly giving me the room.

“Yes,” I said. “I would.”

I stood at the microphone and looked at the room that had once made me feel small.

Then I raised my untouched punch.

“To everyone who spent years believing someone else’s version of themselves,” I said, “may you finally hand the pen back to the person who actually lived the story.”

For a second, nobody moved.

Then Beth started clapping.

Another person joined.

Then another.

Soon, applause filled the gym.

Miriam grabbed her purse and stormed toward the door.

“Mark,” she snapped. “We’re leaving.”

He didn’t move.

She stopped and looked back.

“Are you coming or not?”

Mark looked down at her hand gripping his sleeve. Then he gently removed it.

“No,” he said quietly.

Miriam’s face twisted, but no one followed when she left.

A few minutes later, I walked outside.

I was almost at the parking lot when Mark called my name.

“Daphne, wait.”

I stopped, but I did not turn around right away.

That was new for me.

Before, I would have turned quickly. Eagerly. Gratefully.

This time, I took my time.

He stood a few feet away, hands in his pockets.

“I’m sorry,” he said. “I was wrong.”

“Yes,” I replied. “You were.”

He swallowed.

“I forgot who you were.”

“No, Mark. You let someone else tell you.”

His eyes shone.

“Can we talk? Five minutes?”

“For years, I begged for five honest minutes from you.”

“I know.”

“No,” I said. “You don’t. Because if you did, you would have given them to me before I had to defend myself in front of strangers.”

“Is there any chance?” he asked.

“For what?”

“For us.”

I almost smiled.

“There hasn’t been an us for a long time. There was you, me, and Miriam’s voice between us.”

Behind him, Norton stepped outside with his keys. He stopped when he saw Mark.

“Everything okay?”

I looked at Norton. Then at Mark. Then back at the gym doors.

“Yes,” I said. “I’m ready to go.”

Mark stepped closer.

“Daphne, please.”

“No,” I said. “You don’t get my time now just because the room finally stopped believing her.”

Norton unlocked the car but did not open the door for me.

I opened it myself.

Before I got in, I turned to Mark one last time.

“You should have asked me for the truth when it still mattered.”

Then I got into the car.

As Norton drove away, I looked back at the gym.

For twenty years, I thought that room belonged to Miriam.

But it had only been waiting for me to stop letting her hold the microphone.

I hired someone to stand beside me for one night.

But I left with the woman I should have stood beside all along.

I left with myself.

Leave a Comment