He Called His Mum A Burden — Then His Key Failed At Her Door-heuh

My son forgot to hang up, and I heard him call me a burden.

So while he and his wife were smiling their way through Italy and France, planning a future that already included my house, I quietly sold the £875,000 home his father and I spent 32 years paying off, packed everything without a word, and came back just in time to watch his key stop working in my front door.

The first sign that Daniel understood something was wrong was not his face.

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It was his hand.

It tightened around the little silver key until his knuckles went pale.

He stood on the front step in his travel jacket, tired from the airport but still carrying that confident little air of a man who thought every locked door in his childhood still had to open for him.

His suitcase stood beside him, hard-shell, expensive, dragged over cobbles and station floors and now resting on the wet paving outside the house his father and I had spent more than three decades paying for.

Melissa stood a step behind him, sunglasses on top of her head though the sky was grey, shopping bags dangling from one wrist.

She was smiling at first.

That was the part I noticed.

She still had the relaxed, sun-warmed smile of someone returning to a place she believed was waiting for her.

Daniel pushed the key in and turned.

Nothing.

He frowned, pulled it out, wiped it on his sleeve, and tried again.

Still nothing.

Across the road, parked where I could see the front door without being seen, I sat in the passenger seat of a hired van with both hands wrapped around a paper cup of tea.

The tea had gone cold ages ago.

I held it because my hands needed something to do.

The house looked almost ordinary from the outside.

Same brick, same little step, same narrow path with damp weeds nosing up between the paving stones.

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