My father was gone, and the thought wouldn’t let me go. He’d always been my anchor, but in the end, he sank beneath the weight of debts that dragged us both under. Now the house we once shared was being repossessed, and I had no fight left in me. At the notary’s office, I barely listened—until he mentioned another house. Not the one I was losing, but a different one I’d never heard of. The address meant nothing, but I clung to the documents like a lifeline.
The next day, I went to see it. It was old, but well-kept. I tried the key—it didn’t fit. As I peered through a window, the front door suddenly opened. A stern woman, about sixty, stood in the doorway, staring at me.
“This is my house,” I stammered, holding out the key. “My father left it to me.” Her response hit hard. She’d lived there for twenty years—paid every bill, fixed every leak. She wasn’t leaving. I called my lawyer. “Legally, it’s yours,” he said. “We’ll sort it out Monday.”
Until then, I stayed. Living with Deborah was like living in a battlefield. The water cut off mid-shower. My things vanished, only to reappear in strange places. By Monday, I was unraveling. My dress—one I’d laid out carefully—was suddenly stained and muddy. I snapped.
“Why are you doing this?” I shouted.
Her reply stopped me cold.
“You don’t belong here. This was never meant to be yours. Your father took everything—he took you. He told you I was dead, didn’t he?”
She wasn’t just some bitter woman.
She was my mother.
She had left us, chasing a better life. But it didn’t work out. When she came back, my father shut her out. He kept me—and erased her. She’d carried that pain in silence all these years.
Eventually, the court ruled in her favor. Legally, the house was hers.
I packed my suitcase. At the door, I felt her watching me.
“I don’t want you to go,” she said softly. “I blamed myself all these years. When you showed up, I took it out on you. But you’re my daughter, Emily. I don’t want to lose you again.”
Tears welled in my eyes.
“I’m sorry too, Mom…”
We had lost so much.
But maybe—just maybe—we could begin again.