“I messed up, Mom,” he whispered. “I let her come between us. I let her convince me that you were… disposable. And I was wrong. I was so wrong.”
I reached across the table and took his hand.
“I forgave you a long time ago,” I said. “But I needed you to see what happens when you forget who your people are.”
His eyes welled with tears. “I’ll do anything to make this right.”
“You already did,” I said, motioning toward the kids.
Lily looked up. “Grandma, can we stay here for a little while?”
I smiled. “You can stay as long as you need.”
Daniel and the kids moved into the upstairs guest room that night. It wasn’t a mansion, but it was home. Over the next few months, we repaired more than just the leaky faucet and the squeaky floorboards — we began to rebuild our family.
Daniel took a job closer to home. I watched the kids after school, and every evening we had dinner together at the table, just like old times. Sometimes, my son would sit with me in the kitchen after the kids were asleep, and we’d talk for hours like we used to. We didn’t talk about Mary much, and we didn’t need to. That chapter was closed.
One night, he brought me a small box wrapped in plain brown paper.
