The morning my son laughed at me began like any other quiet Tuesday on our street — the kind where the mail truck’s brakes sigh at the corner, where the maple throws dappled light across the old porch swing Arthur built, where the air smells faintly of coffee and fallen leaves. I watered the two window boxes that survived the August heat, checked the back door twice out of habit, and set out the blue mug Leo likes, the one with the chipped rim from a long‑ago move he swore would be his last. He arrived with the breeze, with the easy confidence of someone who believes the world — and his mother — will bend.
He kissed my cheek, dropped his keys onto the bowl Arthur carved from spalted maple, and said he could only stay a minute. A minute stretched, as minutes do, when the guest comes with a purpose. He laughed.
My son, Leo, actually threw his head back and laughed when I told him I still had a nest egg. It wasn’t a chuckle or a knowing grin; it was a deep, dismissive roar — the kind you’d give a child who just declared they could fly to the moon by flapping their arms. I stood there in the warmth of my own kitchen, the mug of coffee I’d made for him growing cool in my hands.
I listened to my own child — the boy I had raised through double shifts and crushing exhaustion — mock the notion that his seventy‑six‑year‑old mother might still possess a single shred of agency over her own life. “Mom,” he said, wiping a tear of mirth from his eye, “you don’t need to worry about that stuff anymore. That’s what family is for.
We’ve got you.”
He glanced at his wife, Sophia, who was scrolling silently through her phone, her expression a mask of elegant boredom. She murmured something that could have been agreement or simply an acknowledgement of sound in the room. Leo had stopped by under the guise of checking in, but the visit — like all the others — had quickly veered toward its true purpose: money.
This time it was a tech startup, a can’t‑miss opportunity, he’d called it, his eyes gleaming with the manic energy of a man perpetually chasing a future he felt entitled to. He didn’t ask if I wanted to invest; he spoke as if my funds were already earmarked for his venture, a line item in his grand business plan. I didn’t answer right away.
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