I Bought My Grandparents A Dream Cruise—Then Mum Took Their Place-heuh

I paid £19,400 for my grandparents’ anniversary cruise, something they had dreamed about for thirty-eight years.

Two days before departure, my mum sipped her coffee and said, “We’re going instead.”

My sister laughed and promised to tag my grandparents in the stories.

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I did not argue.

I made one quiet call.

At the port in Barcelona, the clerk frowned at their passports and said, “You’re not on the manifest.”

My mother slowly turned to me and looked as if the floor had shifted under her expensive shoes.

But to understand why I was standing there with my heart knocking against my ribs, you have to understand what £19,400 had meant to me.

It had not been a number on a screen for very long.

It became a sound.

It was the beep of the till at the end of another late shift.

It was the hiss of the bus doors on a rainy night when I was too tired to stand properly.

It was the ache in my feet when I let myself into my small rented flat and hung my damp coat over a chair because the radiator never seemed to do much.

It was every invitation I turned down with an apologetic little smile.

Sorry, I can’t.

Sorry, I’m working.

Sorry, maybe next time.

After a while, people stop asking, not because they stop caring, but because your answer becomes part of you.

Mine was always the same.

I was saving.

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