After Divorce, I Came Home For Three Years — Then They Erased Us-Teptep

After the divorce, I brought my daughter to live with my parents for three years.

I did not go back there looking for pity.

I went back because my mother had fallen and broken her leg, and there was no one in the house who could properly look after her.

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My father was still working outside every day, leaving early and coming home with mud on his trousers and smoke on his coat.

My younger brother had his own family to feed, and my sister-in-law always seemed to have a reason why she could not help.

So I packed my daughter’s clothes into two bags, held her little hand, and returned to the house where I had grown up.

She was three then.

Still small enough to fall asleep with one fist wrapped in my sleeve.

At first, I told myself it would only be temporary.

I would stay until Mum’s leg healed, until the house settled down, until I could find my footing after the divorce.

But life has a way of turning temporary arrangements into duties nobody else remembers asking you to take on.

I cooked.

I cleaned.

I washed clothes, bought groceries, paid bills, took my mother to appointments, helped her sit up, helped her lie down, and listened when she complained that pain made the nights too long.

I did not mind at the beginning.

She was my mother.

However badly my marriage had ended, I still believed my parents’ house was somewhere I could stand without being pushed away.

My daughter grew used to the narrow hallway, the chipped bowls in the kitchen, the kettle that rattled before it boiled, and the old back door that needed lifting before it would shut.

She called the place home.

So did I.

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