My Children Told Me To “Eat Less” Before My £4.2 Million Reveal-heuh

The day I told my kids I couldn’t afford groceries, they laughed and said, “Eat less then,” but they didn’t know I’d inherited £4.2 million the night before, so I stayed quiet long enough to see exactly who they had become.

The fridge door was open when Michael said it, and somehow that made the moment worse.

Cold air was spilling into the kitchen, brushing across my slippers, making the old lino feel even colder beneath my feet.

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The small bulb inside the fridge buzzed over three eggs, half a pint of milk, a jar of mustard, and a plastic tub of soup I had already watered down twice.

Outside, the afternoon had gone grey and wet.

Rain sat on the window in tiny beads, and the sky looked as tired as I felt.

The kettle had clicked off ten minutes earlier, but I had forgotten to make the tea.

On the worktop beside me were the heating bill, a receipt from the chemist, and a shopping list written on the back of an old envelope.

Bread.

Apples.

Chicken.

Coffee.

It was not a list for a woman who fancied being spoiled.

It was a list for a woman trying to stay upright.

“Maybe you should eat less then, Mum,” Michael said.

He did not shout.

He did not sneer in any obvious way.

He simply said it with the careless ease of a man standing in a warm house, surrounded by full cupboards, who had never once wondered whether the last egg should be breakfast or dinner.

I held the phone tighter.

“Michael,” I said, “I’m not asking you to pay my life away. I’m asking whether you could bring a few groceries round until my pension comes in.”

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