She Raised Him 19 Years, Then His Real Mum Brought A Cake-heuh

Joanna had always believed that love was measured in the things nobody noticed.

The shirt ironed before sunrise.

The packed lunch made when there was hardly anything left in the fridge.

Image

The hand placed against a feverish forehead at three in the morning.

The quiet lie that everything was fine when the electric bill sat unopened beside the kettle.

So when Denise walked into Simon’s graduation carrying a cake that said she was his real mum, Joanna did not shout.

She simply sat in the third row of the school hall with her hands folded over a bent programme and felt nineteen years tilt beneath her.

The morning had begun with drizzle on the windows and the kettle clicking off in the kitchen.

Joanna had woken before Simon, though he was nineteen now and more than capable of getting himself ready.

Still, old habits held.

She laid his white shirt over the ironing board, checked the collar twice, and ran the iron over the cuffs until they looked sharp enough for photographs.

The house smelled faintly of steam, toast, and the lavender powder she used because it was cheaper in the large box.

Simon came downstairs half dressed, hair damp from the shower, one shoe in his hand.

“You don’t have to fuss, Mum,” he said.

Joanna pretended to inspect the sleeve instead of reacting to the word.

She had been called Mum by Simon for so long that it had become as natural as breathing, but on days like this it still caught somewhere tender.

“I’m not fussing,” she said. “I’m making sure you don’t go up there looking like you slept in a hedge.”

He smiled, that same crooked smile he had worn as a boy when he wanted extra jam on toast.

At the kitchen table, his gown lay folded over the back of a chair, and his cap sat beside an old mug with a chip in the handle.

There was a card too.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.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