Mum Was Shamed Over A £300,000 Bag — Then The Police Arrived-Teptep

On Mother’s Day, I took my mother for a stroll through the shopping centre, stopping by the city’s most famous luxury handbag store.

It was meant to be simple.

A quiet walk, a little window-shopping, maybe a present if I could persuade my mother to stop saying she did not need anything.

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The rain had passed over just before we arrived, leaving the pavements shiny and grey outside the shopping centre doors.

My mother shook her umbrella twice before folding it neatly, as if even a few drops on the floor might inconvenience someone.

That was the kind of woman she was.

Careful.

Polite.

Always apologising first, even when she had done nothing wrong.

Inside, the centre was warm and bright, full of families drifting between cafés and shops with bunches of flowers, gift bags, and paper cups of tea.

My mother walked beside me with both hands on the strap of her old handbag.

She had owned it for years.

The corners were soft, the zip stuck sometimes, and one side had a faint mark from where she had once caught it against a bus seat.

She would never replace it herself.

If I bought her one, she would say it was wasteful.

Then she would wrap it in tissue, put it in the wardrobe, and only take it out for weddings or parent meetings long after she had retired.

That thought made me smile before we even reached the boutique.

The shopfront was all glass and gold light, with two handbags displayed as if they were museum pieces.

My mother slowed down at once.

Not because she wanted to go in.

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