Son Demanded His Mum’s £1.3 Million — Then Saw Her Solicitor-heuh

The first thing my son shouted was not “Mum.”

It was not “Are you all right?” or even “What happened?”

It was, “Where is my money?”

Image

That was how I found out, at sixty-two years old, that the child I had raised with sore hands, cheap meals, old coats and forty years of sacrifice had stopped seeing me as his mother.

He saw me as money waiting to be taken.

By the time Matthew came thundering up the stairs to my flat that Monday morning, furious because every account he thought he could empty had already been closed, I was not the woman who once cut the last sausage in half so he could have the bigger piece.

I was ready.

The morning was grey and wet, the kind of British morning that makes every hallway smell faintly of damp wool and old paint.

My kettle had boiled twice and clicked off twice, but the tea in my mug had gone cold because none of us were really there to drink it.

I sat on the sofa in my white blouse and black trousers, hands folded in my lap, while Gregory Hayes, my solicitor, sat beside me with a folder on the coffee table.

Near the door stood Vincent, a quiet court officer with broad shoulders and kind eyes.

He did not say much.

He did not need to.

His presence meant my son’s anger would have a boundary, whether Matthew liked it or not.

My name is Carol, and for most of my life I believed motherhood meant giving until you had almost disappeared.

I was eighteen when I had Matthew.

His father left before the baby clothes were properly folded away, before I had learnt how to survive on two hours of sleep and no spare change.

There was no dramatic farewell.

There was just absence.

So I worked.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *