For 25 years, my stepfather labored as a construction worker, raising me with the dream of a PhD. At my graduation, the professor’s look of recognition left everyone stunned.
I came from an incomplete family. My parents parted ways when I was just learning to walk. My mother, Elena, brought me to Santiago Vale, a poor town of rice fields and strong winds. My father’s image is faint in my memory. My childhood lacked many comforts.
At four, my mother remarried. The man who joined our family had only a worn back, sun-baked skin, and calloused hands from cement. Initially, I was wary. He left early and returned late, smelling of work. But he was always there to quietly fix my broken bicycle and mend sandals. He never scolded me for mistakes, only cleaned them up. When I was bu/llie/d, he rode his bicycle to bring me home.
On the way, he simply said: “I won’t demand you call me father. But I will always be here for you.”
From that moment, he was “dad” to me.
Memories of him were simple: dusty uniforms, rusty bikes, evenings after laboring all day. No matter how exhausted, he asked: “How was school?”
He wasn’t academically gifted, yet he taught me: “Knowledge commands respect. Always study well.”
Our family had little. Passing the Metro City University exam made my mother cry. Hector smoked quietly. He sold his motorbike, combined it with my grandmother’s savings, and sent me to school.
He arrived in the city sweaty, wearing an old cap, carrying gifts from home: rice, dried fish, peanuts. Before leaving the dorm, he said: “Do your best, child. Study hard.”
Inside my packed lunch was a folded note: “I may not understand your studies, but I will work for it. Don’t worry.”
Years passed. College and graduate school were done. Hector’s back bent further, hands rougher. I told him to rest. He shrugged: “I’m raising a PhD. That’s pride enough.”
On defense day, he attended, borrowing a suit, wearing tight shoes, and a new hat. He sat straight in the back, eyes fixed on me.
Professor came to shake my hand and greet my family. Seeing Hector, he stopped and said:
“You’re Hector Alvarez, right?”
Before Hector could speak, the professor…
