On Mother’s Day, my millionaire son came to visit and asked, “Mom, are you living comfortably with the $5,000 Clara sends you every month?” I froze, then answered softly, “Son, the church has been helping me get by.” Right then, my daughter-in-law walked in wearing a silk dress, a strand of pearls, and expensive perfume, smiling sweetly — not realizing what was about to happen next…

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On Mother’s Day, my son came to visit me carrying a bouquet as bright as the Sunday morning outside my windows. David was thirty-eight now, young, wealthy, and always busy, the kind of man whose phone never seemed to stop lighting up and whose shoes looked too polished for the dusty road that led to my little house outside Dallas. He placed the flowers on my old wooden table, looked at me with a gentle but distant expression, and said, “Mom, my wife still sends you five thousand dollars every month, right?

I just want to make sure you’re comfortable.”

I froze. My heart began pounding so hard I could hear it over the soft hum of the ceiling fan. Five thousand dollars?

For the past eight months, I had been living on food packages from St. Mary’s Church and small donations from kind neighbors who knew enough not to ask too many questions. I had been stretching canned soup over two meals, waiting until the last possible week to refill my blood pressure medication, and pretending the leaking roof was only a small inconvenience.

I looked at my son, the boy I had once rocked to sleep in this very house, and whispered, “Son, the church is helping me get by.”

His smile vanished. Before he could answer, my daughter-in-law appeared in the doorway like she had stepped out of a glossy magazine instead of my narrow front hall. Clara wore a pearl-colored silk dress, shiny silver heels, and a cloud of expensive perfume that drifted through the room like mockery.

Her smile was dazzling, but her eyes were colder than any winter I had ever known in Texas. She did not realize that on that very day, the last light of her elegance would begin to fade. My name is Margaret Hayes.

I am a sixty-seven-year-old widow living alone in a small house on the outskirts of Dallas, Texas. This house used to be filled with laughter. It was where my husband, Frank, and I raised our only son, David.

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