After a week at my mother-in-law’s, my 13-year-old son returned home and declared he no longer wanted me in his life.

26

We sent our 13-year-old son to his grandma’s for just one week. He left with tears in his eyes and came back with fury in his voice. What he said when he stepped out of the car tore through me like glass straight to the heart… and it all started with a story his grandma never should’ve told him.

My name is Demi and I thought I had it all figured out — a loving husband, a beautiful son, and a home filled with laughter in our quiet Lakeview neighborhood. But sometimes life reminds you that everything can crumble in a single moment. Arthur had been pacing our kitchen for weeks, staring at his phone.

“Mom’s been calling again. She really wants Rio to visit.”

I dried the breakfast dishes harder than necessary. “You know how he feels about going there, honey.”

“But she’s his grandmother, Demi.

Family is important.”

Rio shuffled in, his dark hair messy from sleep. At 13, he was all arms and legs, growing faster than I could keep up. “Do I really have to go to Grandma Eden’s this summer?”

Arthur set down his mug firmly.

“Yes, son. She’s been asking for months.”

“But Dad—”

“No buts. It’s just for a week, buddy.”

Rio scowled.

‘Yeah, fine. One week. But not a day longer.

I hate going there… you know that.”

The morning Rio left, it felt like a piece of me was walking out that door with him. He stood by our front door, clutching his duffel bag, tears streaming down his face. “Please, Mom, I don’t wanna go.

Grandma’s always weird with me. She makes me wake up at six, talks forever about cooking stuff I don’t even care about, won’t let me ride my bike past the driveway… and she’s always going on about my hair.”

My heart shattered, but Arthur was already loading the car. I knelt to Rio’s level, smoothing his hair.

“Baby, it’s just seven days. I’ll call you every single day.”

“Promise?”

“Cross my heart.”

He hugged me tight, and I caught that familiar mix of his worn hoodie, a hint of the body spray he just started using, and the same shampoo we’ve kept in the house since he was little. “I love you, sweetheart.”

“Love you too, Mom.”

Arthur honked.

“Come on, buddy. Traffic’s getting heavy.”

“Why can’t you come with me?” Rio asked me, his lip trembling. “Because your grandmother hates me,” I wanted to say.

The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
Tap READ MORE to discover the rest 🔎👇