When I was three years old, my mother walked out of our lives, leaving my father to raise me on his own. I have no clear memory of the day she left—at that age, the world is made of fragments and blurred impressions—but I remember the silence that followed. It settled into our home like dust, thick and unmoving.
My father never spoke about her. Her name was never mentioned at the dinner table, never brought up during birthdays, never revisited during the quiet evenings when it felt like something was missing. Whenever I gathered the courage to ask about her, he would give me the same measured response, his voice steady and final:
“She wasn’t fit to be your mom.”
As a child, I didn’t fully understand what that meant.
But the words lingered. They wrapped themselves around my imagination and grew heavier with each passing year. Was she dangerous?
Unstable? Had she simply stopped loving me? Did I do something wrong?
The mystery followed me everywhere. At school events where other kids ran into their mothers’ arms. On Mother’s Day, when I’d sit at my desk unsure what to draw.
Late at night, staring at the ceiling, wondering what her voice sounded like when she said my name. Eventually, I stopped asking. Not because I stopped wondering—but because I learned that some doors in our house stayed closed.
Then, when I turned 18, everything changed. It was an ordinary afternoon at work. I had a part-time job at a small grocery store, and I was busy stacking shelves, lining up cereal boxes in perfect rows, when I felt someone watching me.
I glanced up—and saw her. A familiar woman stood at the end of the aisle, trembling. Her hands were clasped tightly together, and her eyes were brimming with tears.
My heart nearly stopped. I knew her. Everyone at school knew her.
She was the cleaning lady—“Mrs. Jenkins.”
For years, she had swept the hallways before classes began, scrubbed desks after we’d left, and picked up trash that careless students tossed aside. She moved quietly through the building, almost invisible to most.
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