My son proudly told his father he would send him 10,000 yuan a month, while I, his own biological mother, was to be given 500 yuan, and in that same breath he said I should be grateful because I was used to living frugally. I did not shout. I did not throw the plates. I simply stood there for a moment, staring at the boy I had raised from six years old into a grown man, and felt something inside me go very cold.
My retirement day should have felt like a beginning.
That is the word people use, isn’t it? Retirement. As if there is a tidy ending to hard work, a neat little ceremony where someone hands you a pension and thanks you for your service. My life was never like that. I did not work in an office with holidays, a salary, and a pension scheme. I rented a small grocery shop and survived on the money I earned from selling rice, oil, washing powder, biscuits, and all the ordinary things people need and never think twice about. My hands were always rough. My back was always sore. Some mornings I had to stand still for a few seconds before I could straighten up.
So when Lin Xuan said he wanted to celebrate me, I allowed myself to hope.
He called and spoke in that bright, practised voice adults use when they want to sound thoughtful. He told me to come over for dinner. He said I should buy some ingredients and cook, because he wanted the family to be together. He even said his father would come too.
His father.
Lin Jian Guo.
The man I had not wanted to see for twenty years.
I asked why he was invited, because I honestly did not understand. Lin Jian Guo had left when our son was six. He did not leave because he was brave enough to start again. He left because he had gambled away his future and buried us under the mess. The house was already mortgaged in secret. There was no wealth to divide, no grand sacrifice, no noble exit. He simply disappeared when everything became too ugly for him.
For fifteen years after that, there was nothing. No calls. No birthday wishes. No tuition money. No apology that meant anything.
Then, two years ago, the man reappeared the moment he heard our son was doing well.
He came to my door with red eyes and a broken voice, saying he had no choice, saying he had suffered too, saying he was sorry in the way people say sorry when they want something. I expected Lin Xuan to close the door on him.
He did not.
Instead, my son did the opposite. He added his father on WeChat. He called him occasionally. He invited him to the house at New Year. And there sat Wang Fang, the woman Lin Jian Guo had married after leaving me, smiling as though she had a rightful place at every table.
I sat beside them and felt like a spare chair.
I was hurt by it, yes. Deeply hurt. But I kept swallowing it down because I kept telling myself that a son wanting his father was not a sin. I told myself I was being mature. I told myself I should not dredge up the past.
So I said yes to dinner.
I bought the fruit he asked for. I bought the cherries and the durian. I went to the supermarket and carried the bags home and then to my son’s place that evening, telling myself the whole thing would be awkward but harmless.
The moment I arrived, my daughter-in-law opened the door and looked at me in the way some people look at a cleaner arriving late.
“Mum, you’re here? Come in and cook. We’re nearly hungry.”
Then she turned away and went back to the sofa where she was talking to Wang Fang.
No one took my bag. No one asked whether I had eaten. No one offered me a glass of water.
Lin Jian Guo gave me a tight smile, the kind that tries to look polite while making no effort to be sincere.
I went into the kitchen and cooked for two hours straight.
There were six dishes in the end. Six dishes, while my back throbbed and my wrists ached and the kitchen felt too hot by half. I washed the vegetables, chopped the meat, stirred the soup, and set the table without anyone stepping in to help. Every so often I heard laughter from the living room and the clink of cups.
When the food was ready, Lin Xuan finally emerged from his study, lifted his glass, and delivered a small speech about family harmony.
It was the sort of speech people make when they want to appear decent.
He said my retirement and his father’s retirement should be celebrated together. He said the family should live peacefully from now on. I sat down and listened, still hoping, stupidly perhaps, that somewhere in all of this there might be a gesture directed towards me.
Then his father leaned forward.
He smiled the way men smile when they think a room is already on their side.
He mentioned filial duty. He mentioned retirement money. He said it as casually as if he were discussing the weather.
And my son, my only child, the boy I had carried through fever, school fees, scraped knees, and all the lonely years, laughed and said he had already sorted it.
At first, when I heard the words “retirement money”, something softened in me. I thought he had finally remembered that I was the one who had raised him alone. I thought, perhaps naïvely, that the dinner had been planned for that very reason. I thought he might have finally chosen me.
He had chosen his own version of fairness instead.
Dad would receive 10,000 yuan every month.
I would receive 500.
The justification came almost immediately. My son said Dad only had 8,000 yuan in pension, and because he had to care for Wang Fang, who was used to living comfortably, he needed more help. He then said I was alone, and that 500 yuan should be enough for me to live on because I had always lived simply.
I could not tell whether he genuinely believed what he was saying or whether he had simply stopped caring how it sounded.
My daughter-in-law did not intervene.
Wang Fang did not look ashamed.
Lin Jian Guo sat back in his chair with the expression of a man who has just been handed something he does not deserve but is happy to accept anyway.
I looked at all of them and suddenly felt very tired.
There are moments in life when anger is too small a word. What I felt was something more frightening than anger. It was the sensation of being erased by the people who knew my face best. It was the sensation of standing in my own child’s home and realising that he had assigned more value to the man who vanished than to the woman who stayed.
I did not argue.
I did not beg.
I did not remind him about school mornings, hospital visits, winter coats, or the nights I sat beside his bed when he was ill. None of it came out. If you have ever been humiliated by someone you raised, you will know that sometimes the body decides what the mouth cannot. My hand simply moved, placed the chopsticks down, and reached for my bag.
I stood up.
No one stopped me.
I walked to the lift and pushed the button, waiting in the corridor while the smell of dinner drifted from behind me. The apartment door stayed open. Voices moved around the table. A spoon clinked against a bowl. It was all so normal that for a second I wondered whether I had imagined the insult.
Then my phone rang.
It was Uncle Wang from my home village.
His voice was excited enough to crack.
He said my old neighbourhood had been demolished.
He said the compensation for my old house was 8,000,000 yuan.
I remember very little of the next few seconds except the feeling of the corridor floor under my shoes and the heaviness in my chest. The lift doors were open. I had one hand on the frame and the other around my phone. My son’s laughter was still faintly audible from inside the flat, but it no longer mattered. The entire room had shifted beneath me.
Because suddenly I understood the shape of the insult in full.
My son had taken the side of his father without knowing the value of what he was dismissing.
He had given 10,000 yuan to the man who walked away.
He had given 500 yuan to the mother who stayed.
And the house I had once argued over, survived in, and never fully stopped worrying about had just turned into 8,000,000 yuan.
I could hardly breathe.
I stared at the phone, then at the open doorway, then back at the phone again. My fingers were shaking badly enough that I nearly dropped it. I could hear Uncle Wang saying something else, his voice still loud with excitement, but the first figure had already landed in my mind like a stone in still water.
Eight million.
Not eighty thousand.
Not eight hundred thousand.
Eight million yuan.
The line between being ignored and being important can be very thin when money is involved, and in that corridor I felt that line splitting open. The son who had just told me 500 yuan was enough for me to live on had no idea that the most valuable thing in the family had not been the father at the table, nor the younger wife, nor even the polished speech about harmony.
It had been the old house.
And the compensation was already in motion.
Uncle Wang’s next words should have been simple, but they struck me even harder because they made the whole thing unmistakably real. He said the approval was under my name.
Under my name.
I remember that sentence more clearly than the rest.
Because it meant this was never Lin Xuan’s to divide.
It meant the woman he had so casually reduced to 500 yuan might be the only one standing on the right side of the money after all.
And just as I stood there trying to make sense of it, the apartment door opened behind me.
I heard my son call my name, his voice suddenly stripped of its easy confidence.
I did not turn around straight away.
I had one hand on the lift frame, one on the phone, and the whole family behind me had not yet realised that the meal they had just served might cost them far more than they could imagine.
Then Uncle Wang spoke again, and this time what he said made my legs nearly give way.