The living room was dim, just the way I liked it after dusk. The faint scent of jasmine tea still lingered in the air, and the soft ticking of the wall clock filled the silence—something I’d grown oddly fond of in my quieter years. I was folding laundry when it happened.
When he said it. My son. My only child.
“There’s no room for you here anymore. You need to leave.”
He didn’t stammer. Didn’t even blink.
Just stood there—arms folded—speaking like he was addressing a neighbor, not the mother who raised him singlehandedly. The woman who skipped dinners so he could eat, who wore worn-out clothes so he could start school with something new.Mother-baby bonding classes
For a moment, I thought I’d misheard. Maybe my old ears, dulled by time, were playing tricks on me.
But no. His wife sat silently on the couch, eyes glued to her phone, offering no objection. My grandson, no older than ten, looked up briefly—then turned back to his video game.
I looked at my son. I gave a small laugh, nervous. “What do you mean, Minh?
Where would I even go?”
His tone didn’t change. “We’ve decided. Your room’s becoming our office.
You’ve lived here rent-free long enough. It’s time to move on. There’s a retirement place nearby.”
It felt like I’d been shoved off a cliff.
His words echoed, sharp and final. A retirement home? I knew no one there.
I had been the one cooking their meals, looking after their child, while they worked, traveled, and lived their lives. And now, like something old and used up, I was being discarded. I didn’t argue.
That night, I packed. Pride is a strange friend in old age. My hands trembled as I folded my clothes into the last suitcase I owned.
I wouldn’t let them see me cry. I wouldn’t give them the satisfaction. I didn’t go to the retirement center.
Instead, I boarded a bus headed toward the edge of the city. I found a modest guesthouse by the river and paid for a small, dusty room. It smelled like old books and forgotten summers.
But it was quiet. No one asked questions. That was enough.
I spent that first night staring at the ceiling, then at the worn suitcase in the corner. Then at my bankbook—still carefully wrapped in the silk folds of my second-wedding ao dai. They didn’t know.
No one did. I had saved quietly over the years. Every small job, every red envelope from holidays, every extra coin slipped into that piggy bank behind the rice sack.
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