She Vanished From The Birthday Dinner And Left Three Suitcases Waiting-heuh

My name is Aurora Jennings, and I am sixty-eight years old.

For most of my life, I believed a good mother was supposed to give until nobody could accuse her of holding anything back.

Money.

Image

Time.

Food.

Forgiveness.

Excuses.

I gave all of it to my son Daniel, because he was my only child, and because after his father died, I thought loving Daniel enough for two parents meant never telling him no.

That was the mistake that emptied me.

It began with five hundred dollars on a quiet Sunday afternoon.

The phone rang while I was standing in my kitchen, sorting coupons beside a half-cold cup of coffee and listening to the dryer thump down the hall.

Daniel’s name lit up on my screen.

I smiled before I answered, because mothers do that even when they have learned not to expect much.

“Hi, sweetheart,” I said.

His voice came through soft and careful, the kind of careful that always meant he wanted something.

“Mom, I hate to ask,” he said, “but Megan’s car had an unexpected repair. We’re tight this month. Could you lend us five hundred? I’ll pay you back next month, I promise.”

I looked at the stack of envelopes on my table.

Electric bill.

Pharmacy receipt.

Property tax notice.

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