My name is Theresa, and I am sixty-three years old. I’ve been a widow since I was young, and I raised my only daughter, Mary Lou, entirely on my own. She was smart, sweet, and beautiful.
Everyone said she had a great future. And it seemed like she did.
At twenty-one, she met Kang Jun, a Korean man nearly twenty years older than her. I opposed it — not out of prejudice, but because of the age gap and the distance.
But my daughter was stubborn. There was a determination in her eyes that I had no power to change.
They married in a simple ceremony. A month later, she left with him for South Korea.
At the airport, she hugged me and cried. I cried too, but in silence. I thought she would return in a few years.
She never did. One year passed. Then two.
Then five. I stopped asking. Only the money kept coming — every year, exactly eighty thousand dollars, with a short message: “Mom, take good care of yourself.
I’m doing well.” That word — well — was what worried me most. We had a video call once. She was still beautiful, but her eyes weren’t the same.
Always in a hurry. Always distant. I asked why she didn’t come home.
She went quiet, then said: “I’m very busy, Mom.” I didn’t ask again. Sometimes, mothers become cowards out of fear of hearing the truth.
Time passed. My house improved thanks to the money she sent.
Everyone said I was fortunate. But how can you be happy eating alone every day? Every Christmas, I set a place for her.
I would cook her favorite stew and cry in silence. Twelve years. It’s too long.
Finally, I made a decision: I was going to Korea. I didn’t tell her anything. For a sixty-three-year-old woman who had never left the country, it was madness.
But I bought the ticket with trembling hands and went.
I arrived and took a taxi to her address. A two-story house, quiet — too quiet. The garden was nice but lifeless.
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