The next morning, the doorbell rang three times in quick succession, sharp and impatient, as if urgency itself had taken on human hands. I knew who it was before I opened the door. My son Richard only ever came by without calling when he wanted something.
I set down my half-finished cup of tea on the kitchen counter and walked slowly through the hall. Through the front window, I saw his black SUV parked crookedly outside the gate, expensive and careless, like an object that had never been denied anything in its life. Richard had inherited his father’s instincts for business, but none of Edward’s patience and none of his ability to hide contempt behind charm.
When I opened the door, he was already halfway inside. “Mom,” he said. No hug.
Just the faint brush of an obligatory air kiss near my cheek before he moved past me as though he still lived there, as though he still had the right. “We need to talk.”
He headed straight to the kitchen. He sat in my chair at the table, placed a brown folder in front of him, and kept typing on his phone with both thumbs.
He did not ask whether I was busy. He did not ask whether I was all right. He did not even look up.
“A cup of coffee would be nice,” he said. I made it automatically. Ten years into widowhood, and I was still serving the men in my life as if that were the shape of my existence.
Pour. Stir. Set the cup down.
Step back. Wait. When I placed it in front of him, I noticed how tense his hands were, how white his knuckles had gone around the phone.
“How are Fernanda and the kids?” I asked. He took one sip. “They’re fine.”
Flat, dismissive, a door shut with one word.
He set the phone aside at last, leaned back in my chair, and slid the folder across the table toward me. “I’ll get straight to it,” he said. “Mom, I’m in trouble.”
I sat down opposite him.
The clock on the wall ticked louder than it needed to. Outside, somewhere beyond the open window over the sink, a lawn mower droned from a neighboring yard. Ordinary sounds.
Steady sounds. Sounds that belonged to a life I had not realized was about to crack open. “Fernanda got involved in something bad,” he said.
“A bad investment.”
I opened the folder carefully. Inside were bank statements, debt notices, and copies of a loan contract with one number stamped again and again in bold red. $300,000.
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