Cielo always suspected that graduation was less about achievement…
and more about surviving group projects, emotional breakdowns, and photocopying fees.
—
Jessa called it "final boss season."
Cielo called it "logistical exhaustion with ceremonial decoration."
—
Still, there it was.
The announcement on the bulletin board:
GRADUATION DAY: ALL STUDENTS REQUIRED TO ATTEND
Jessa squinted at it. "Required? Even you?"
Cielo nodded slowly. "Apparently, the sun has not issued exemptions."
—
That alone made it feel like a battle.
Not emotional.
Not symbolic.
Literal environmental negotiation.
—
For days before graduation, Cielo prepared like she always did.
Carefully.
Strategically.
Like a scientist preparing for unpredictable conditions.
—
Checklist:
✔ Shade route to venue✔ Emergency handkerchief✔ Water bottle✔ Backup notebook (just in case life gets emotionally intense)✔ "Do not faint" mental rehearsal (unreliable but optimistic)
—
Jessa watched her pack.
"You know normal graduates just iron their clothes and cry a little, right?"
Cielo folded her handkerchief carefully. "I am also prepared to cry. It is on standby."
—
The komiks vendor appeared the day before graduation.
As if summoned by emotional significance.
He didn't bring comics this time.
Just a small folded paper.
—
"For tomorrow," he said simply.
Cielo accepted it.
"Is this another philosophical object?"
He smiled. "It is a reminder."
—
She opened it carefully.
Inside was a short line:
Not all survivals look dramatic. Some just look like showing up.
—
Cielo stared at it longer than expected.
Jessa peeked. "That's illegal. That's too calm for your life narrative."
—
The next morning came too bright.
Of course it did.
The sun had perfect attendance.
—
Cielo stood in front of the mirror, graduation attire slightly stiff, reality slightly louder than usual.
Rosa adjusted her collar.
"You look… ready," her mother said carefully.
—
Cielo blinked. "That sounds uncertain."
Rosa smiled faintly. "That's because I am."
—
Cielo nodded.
"That is statistically reasonable."
—
At the venue, chaos dressed itself as celebration.
Students everywhere.
Parents crying at various emotional volumes.
Teachers pretending not to be relieved.
—
Jessa clung to Cielo's arm. "If I faint from emotions, promise you won't scientifically analyze me in public."
"I will document your symptoms privately," Cielo replied.
—
"You are the worst best friend."
"I am consistent."
—
And then—
Cielo stopped walking.
The sun had shifted.
Just slightly.
Enough to hit the open walkway ahead.
—
Her body remembered before her mind could negotiate.
Heat.
Warning.
Instinct.
—
Jessa noticed instantly. "Hey. Shade route. Now."
—
But there wasn't one.
Not immediately.
Just distance.
Just exposure.
Just expectation.
—
Cielo hesitated.
Not because she didn't know what to do.
But because she realized something strange:
She wasn't alone anymore.
—
She looked at Jessa.
Then at her mother in the crowd.
Then—
For a brief moment—
she thought of the komiks vendor's words:
Not all survivals look dramatic.
—
Cielo exhaled.
Then stepped forward.
—
One step.
Then another.
Not fast.
Not fearless.
Just… forward.
—
Jessa whispered, "You okay?"
Cielo nodded.
Not fully.
Not perfectly.
But honestly.
"Yes."
—
And somehow…
she made it to the shaded area near the stage.
—
Not untouched.
Not unchanged.
But present.
—
When her name was called later…
she walked up.
Not as a girl escaping sunlight.
Not as a problem to be solved.
But as someone who had learned how to exist in both shadow and brightness without disappearing in either.
—
Applause happened.
Photos were taken.
Time did what it always did—continued.
—
From the crowd, Rosa clapped quietly.
Not loudly.
But like someone holding back years of fear finally loosening its grip.
—
Jessa whispered, "Look at you. Graduating like a functional human being."
Cielo corrected softly, "Semi-functional."
—
Jessa smiled. "That's still progress."
—
And somewhere in the background of noise and celebration…
Cielo thought she saw the komiks vendor.
Just for a second.
Smiling.
Like he had always known she would get here.
—
Later that evening, Cielo wrote in her notebook.
Entry: Graduation Against All Odds
Today I learned that survival does not always announce itself.
Sometimes it just walks forward when fear says stop.
—
She paused.
Then added:
I did not overcome the sun.
I learned how to move with it without disappearing.
—
Outside, the world continued burning bright.
But Cielo—
for the first time—
did not feel like she was standing against it.
She felt like she was standing within it.
