Son Demanded His Mum Pay Gambling Debts—Then Solicitors Turned Around-heuh

After my son hit me for refusing to pay his gambling debts, I did not cry.

The strange thing about pain is how ordinary the room can look around it.

The hallway still smelt faintly of polish and damp wool.

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The umbrella stand still held Henry’s old walking stick.

The little brass dish by the door still contained Caleb’s spare key, a pound coin, and a receipt I had been meaning to throw away for three weeks.

Nothing in that narrow hall announced that a mother had just learnt exactly what her son thought she was worth.

Caleb stood above me on the stairs, breathing hard, with whisky on his breath and panic under his skin.

He was thirty-one, but in that moment I saw every age he had ever been.

The toddler who would not sleep unless I sang twice.

The boy who kept a toy fire engine under his pillow because he wanted to be brave in the dark.

The teenager who learnt that apology could be used like a key.

The grown man who had just thrown me into the stone edge of the staircase because I had finally said no.

“You should’ve stayed useful, Mum,” he said.

That sentence was cleaner than the blow.

It went straight through everything I had been pretending not to know.

For years, I had told myself Caleb was unlucky, impulsive, wounded by his father’s death, pressured by the wrong people, or simply not made for responsibility in the way Henry had been.

I had a mother’s entire cupboard of excuses, neatly labelled and always within reach.

Bad investment.

Bad friends.

Bad timing.

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