The Parents Who Abandoned Her Came To Duke And Heard Her New Name-kieutrinh

The first time I saw my biological parents in fifteen years, they were sitting in the reserved section like they had kept a promise.

Section A, row three.

Duke University had polished the auditorium until the floor reflected the stage lights, and the whole place smelled like coffee, fresh flowers, and new paper.

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Families were filling the rows with bouquets, phones, programs, and the kind of nervous pride that makes people laugh too loudly before ceremonies begin.

My mother, Karen Higgins, sat perfectly straight with her hands folded on her purse.

My father, Thomas Higgins, had the commencement program open on his lap and kept running his thumb down the list of names.

A few seats away from them sat Laura Davidson.

She wore a navy dress she bought on sale and held grocery-store flowers in both hands like they were roses from a palace garden.

She was already crying.

That was Laura.

She cried when I passed anatomy.

She cried when I matched into pediatric oncology.

She cried when I found a decent apartment near campus, when I replaced the tires on my used car, when I remembered to eat breakfast before a major exam.

She cried because she had been there for the parts that made this day expensive in ways money could not measure.

My father glanced at her once and looked away.

He had no idea he was dismissing the only reason I had survived long enough to stand backstage in a white coat.

My name is Emily Davidson now.

I was born Emily Higgins.

That first name was given to me by people who left, and the second was given to me by the woman who stayed.

I learned the difference when I was thirteen years old, sitting in hospital room 314 in a paper gown that barely closed behind me.

Dr. Lawson stood in front of my parents and explained acute lymphoblastic leukemia with careful kindness.

He said the treatment would be difficult.

He said the odds were strong.

He said eighty-five to ninety percent survival.

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