I was working brutal hours and draining myself to help the woman who raised me stay in assisted living. She had always been there for me, so I never questioned what it was costing me. Then I showed up early one afternoon and overheard something that made me realize I had no idea what was really going on.
I’m 40, and the woman I call Mom is not my biological mother.
My real mother died when I was eight.
Then my dad married Linda.
She never tried to take over.
She never touched my mother’s things without asking. She never pushed me to call her Mom. She just kept showing up.
She became my mother so slowly I never saw the exact moment it happened.
Then my dad died two years ago.
After the funeral, after the paperwork, after the casseroles stopped coming, it was just me and Linda.
I wish grief had made me better.
More present. More thoughtful.
It didn’t.
I work insane hours. Twelve, sometimes fourteen a day.
I live in a city where rent is stupid, I still had debt from helping with my dad’s medical bills, and most weeks I felt like I was running late to my own life. I called Linda. I visited.
But not enough. Never enough.
Then her health started sliding.
Nothing dramatic at first. She got tired more easily.
She got unsteady. She fell once in her kitchen and laughed it off, but I saw the bruise on her arm and went cold.
I started looking into home care. She hated the idea.
Then one Sunday, she sat me down at her table and said, “I found a place.”
I blinked at her.
“A place for what?”
I stared.
She gave me that calm smile she used whenever she was trying to stop me from panicking. “It’s nice. Small.
Good staff. A garden. Activities.
I already toured it.”
“You toured assisted living without telling me?”
“I didn’t want you to talk me out of it before I had facts.”
“What facts?”
She folded her hands. “Because of an old arrangement, my rate would be reduced.”
I frowned. “What old arrangement?”
“Years ago, after my sister died, I donated part of her estate to help renovate one of their wings.
I also served on their advisory board for a while. Legacy residents like me get a lower rate.”
“Okay,” I said slowly. “How much lower?”
She took a breath.
“$2,500 a month.”
She saw my face and said, “I can cover some of it.”
“No.”
“Listen-“
“No.” I leaned forward.
“You took care of me for 30 years. I can do this.”
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