Everyone in Class 9A knew what the last desk meant. It wasn’t assigned. No one said it out loud, but the last desk, near the broken window and the dusty shelf, was for the student no one noticed. The one who never raised a hand. The one who didn’t laugh too loudly or speak too much. And that’s where Rida sat.
She came to school every day with her hair neatly tied, her notebook clean and her voice steady, but low. Not shy exactly, just invisible. She wasn’t bad at studies, but never topped the class either. She wasn’t unfriendly, but no one was close enough to her to know that she was good at drawing. And no one knew that she walked three kilometres to school every day, while also taking care of her younger brother at home.
She sat at the last desk because all the front and middle desks were filled, but she never complained. Until one day, something changed when their English teacher announced a class speech competition.
“You’ll write about someone who inspires you. Three students will be selected to speak in the assembly,” she smiled. “This is optional. But I want all of you to give it a try.”
Most groaned. A few looked excited. No one expected Rida to try. But that night, in her small room with her brother asleep beside her, Rida picked up her pen. She started writing — not about a celebrity or a freedom fighter, but about her mother, who stitched clothes at home, skipped meals to give her share to the children and taught her how to stay strong even in hard times.
Rida didn’t know why she wrote all this. She didn’t think it would matter. She submitted her speech the next morning quietly, without discussing it with anyone.
A week later, the teacher stood in front of the class and said while holding a paper, “The best-written speech was honest, moving and showed real understanding of the topic.” She then paused and looked towards the back of the class, “Rida, would you come up and read it your speech?”
The class turned. Rida froze. It felt like every eye in the world was on her. Her hands trembled as she stood. Her knees wobbled. Her voice cracked when she began. But by the third sentence, the class was silent. And by the last line, some were blinking faster than usual. When she finished, she looked up and saw something she’d never seen before: they were all looking at her in quiet admiration — and, of course, inspiration.
From that day on, her classmates would come to her for her opinion. A girl invited her to sit next to her. A boy complimented her drawings. She still preferred her quiet corner, but it was no longer the desk for the forgotten, because Rida wasn’t invisible anymore.
Published in Dawn, Young World, Aug 2nd, 2025