Daughter Said Only Important People Came To Her Wedding—Then Mum Found The Forgery-heuh

When I asked Valerie what day her wedding would be, she did not even look up from her phone.

“It was a week ago, Mum,” she said. “We only invited important people.”

The words did not land loudly.

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They landed like a cold hand pressed flat against my chest.

I remember the kitchen light that afternoon, too bright on the good tablecloth, and the roast chicken cooling between us.

I remember the green beans untouched on her plate, the shine of her new bracelet, the way her thumb kept moving over the phone screen as if my face were less interesting than a message.

I had expected many things from motherhood.

Exhaustion, worry, pride, loneliness.

I had not expected to be told, at my own table, that I did not count.

Valerie was my whole life for more than twenty years.

Not in the sweet way people say it when they want to sound devoted.

In the practical, bruising, bank-account way.

When her father left, he did not simply leave me.

He left envelopes on the sideboard, arrears letters in the drawer, and a child asking why Daddy’s coat was gone from the hallway.

I had no grand speech then.

I had a kettle, a washing-up bowl, two tired hands, and a daughter who still needed school shoes.

So I worked.

I sold homemade snacks outside a school until my fingers smelt of pastry and sugar.

I cleaned houses where people had spare rooms bigger than our sitting room.

I ironed shirts for families who left notes beside the basket but never thought to ask if I had eaten.

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