My Son Gave Away My Home While I Lay Silent In A Six-Month Coma-heuh

“Mum, we gave your house to Vanessa’s parents. The doctors didn’t think you were coming back anyway.”

My son said it with the sort of flat, careful voice people use when they are trying to make something wicked sound practical.

I had been awake for less than a day.

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My throat hurt from the tube that had once helped me breathe, my limbs felt heavy and unfamiliar, and the hospital sheets scratched against skin that had not properly moved in half a year.

There was a plastic cup of water on the table beside me, a tea mug gone cold behind it, and a discharge folder tucked under the edge of the blanket as if paperwork could make a miracle ordinary.

Outside the window, rain slid down the glass in thin, grey lines.

Inside, my only son stood at the foot of my bed and told me I no longer had a home.

For six months, everyone had spoken around me.

They had leaned over me, adjusted tubes, whispered updates, sighed into phones, and made decisions in the soft tones people reserve for the seriously ill.

They thought I was absent.

They thought Margaret Alvarez had slipped into some blank, unreachable place where words could no longer land.

They were wrong.

I could not move.

I could not open my eyes.

I could not squeeze a hand, turn my head, or tell anyone when a tear slid down the side of my face and disappeared into my hair.

But I heard.

Not every second, not with the neatness of a recording, but enough.

Enough to know who came.

Enough to know who stayed away.

Enough to know when love had entered the room, and when greed had pulled up a chair beside my bed.

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