Daughter Sold Her Mum’s House While She Was In London-Teptep

My daughter sold my house while I was in London and waited for me at the front door to tell me: “You don’t have a home anymore, Mum.”

Her husband laughed as if he had just buried me alive.

My keys no longer opened the house where I gave birth, became a widow, and grew old.

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But I smiled, because Daniela did not know that tonight she had not sold a house.

She had opened a grave with my family name on it.

“You don’t have a home anymore, Mum.”

That was how she greeted me.

Not with tea.

Not with a hug.

Not even with the awkward little apology people use when they know they have done something unforgivable.

She said it from my front step, one hand on the doorframe, the other holding her handbag tightly against her ribs.

The rain had turned the pavement dark, and the wheels of my suitcase kept catching in the cracks behind me.

I had come home from London aching in every joint, with a damp collar, swollen knees, and that particular tiredness that sits behind the eyes after a long journey.

All I wanted was my chair by the front window and Richard’s old mug by the kettle.

Instead, I stood outside my own door with a key that would not fit.

I tried it once, slowly.

Then I tried again.

Metal scraped against metal, but it would not go in.

I took out the spare from the little side pocket of my purse, the one I had carried for years out of habit.

That one failed too.

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