Christmas Gift Trap: Mum’s Envelope Exposed Her Son’s Wife-heuh

I prepared Christmas dinner for my son and daughter-in-law, gave him a brand-new car and her a £1,500 designer purse, and waited for the small moment every mother pretends does not matter.

The moment when someone remembers her.

The turkey had been cooking since morning, filling my little semi-detached house with rosemary, butter, and heat that fogged the kitchen windows.

Image

Outside, the pavement glittered with frost, and the silver car on my drive wore a red bow so bright the neighbours had been slowing down all afternoon.

Inside, the kettle had clicked off twice because I kept boiling water for tea and then forgetting the mug on the side.

That is what nerves do when you are sixty-six and trying not to admit you are frightened of your own family.

My name is Eleanor.

I am a widow, a retired seamstress, and the sort of woman who still folds wrapping paper if it comes off neatly.

My husband and I bought that house one exhausting year at a time.

There was no grand fortune behind it.

There were packed lunches, late invoices, overtime, quiet arguments about bills, and the relief of finally turning a key in a door that belonged to us.

When he died seven years ago, people kept telling me the house would feel too big.

They meant well.

They did not understand that every room had kept a piece of him alive.

His chair was still angled towards the television.

His old coat still hung in the cupboard longer than it should have.

In spring, I still talked to him in the back garden when the soil was damp and the first green shoots pushed through.

And through all that loneliness, there was one person I kept saving for.

William.

My only son.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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