He sat up so fast his glasses slipped crooked on his face. “What? What happened?”
“The money.
Your surgery savings. A thousand dollars is gone.”
His face drained. “What?
That’s not possible.”
We just stared at each other for a moment, then we both turned to the hallway.
“Joseph,” I said.
“He’s six, he might’ve taken it to play with,” Mark added.
Our son knew money wasn’t a toy, but at that point, I was willing to accept any explanation that meant I could get that money back.
When I entered Joseph’s room, he was playing with his blocks on the floor. I dropped to my knees in front of him, trying with everything I had to keep my face soft.
He looked up and smiled. “Hi, Mommy.”
“Can I ask you something?
Did you take any money from Mommy’s office?”
I expected confusion.
Instead, he nodded. “Yeah.”
For a second, I thought he’d misunderstood me.
He placed one block on top of another. “I gave it to Granny.”
I sat back on my heels and took a moment to gather some patience.
Nothing Joseph was saying made sense!
I grew up in the foster system. I didn’t have a mother. Mark’s mom, Carolyn, had been staying with us to help out while Mark was ill, but she’d never have taken that money.
She knew what was at stake.
“Sweetheart, can you tell me again what you did with that money?”
He looked up at me like I was asking him the dumbest question on earth.
I shook my head slowly. “Baby, Grandma Carolyn wouldn’t ask you for money.”
He frowned. “Not that Granny.”
A cold feeling crawled up my back.
“Then which one?”
He leaned closer, lowering his voice the way kids do when they think they’re sharing something important.
“She doesn’t come inside. She talks to me by the fence.”
***
That night, I installed a small camera facing the back fence.
I felt strangely calm doing it. Perhaps because I’d spent all afternoon overthinking what Joseph had told me, and I had come to a chilling realization.
I didn’t tell Mark. Not yet.
I needed to know for certain if I was right about “Granny.”
The next afternoon, I sat in my office with my laptop open, checking the footage.
Joseph dug in the dirt with a plastic shovel.
He lined up toy cars along the flower bed.
Then a figure appeared at the fence.
Joseph ran to the fence. She bent down and spoke to him through the slats.
I leaned toward the screen and hit zoom.
The picture sharpened in jerks.
Then her face became clear.
I knew that face.
Eight years ago, I had told that woman that I never wanted to see her again.
And now she was back, smiling at my son with the same softness that once fooled me.
My fingers shook as I shut the laptop. I knew she’d be back — people like her always come back when they think they’ve found an opening. But next time, I’d be waiting for her.
The next day, I let Joseph go outside with his blocks and his toy dump truck.
Then I stood just inside the back door, watching through the glass. Waiting.
A few minutes later, she appeared.
“Hi, sweetheart,” she called.
Joseph’s whole face lit up. “Hi, Granny!”
I didn’t go out the back door.
Instead, I hurried through the house and exited through the front. Then I circled round the house to approach her from the side.
She was crouched down, speaking to Joseph. I tiptoed up along the fence line until Joseph turned and looked at me.
Her head snapped up.
For a second, we just stared at each other across the fence, the years between us packed with too much history to fit in the space.
My biological mother. The woman who had abandoned me at birth then returned years later to manipulate and control me by pretending she desperately needed money.
“Linda, I told you to stay away from me,” I said.
“I didn’t want to upset you,” she said softly.
“I just wanted to see him.”
Her mouth opened. “No, I—”
