Mark stood up so fast his chair scraped loudly against the linoleum. âYouâve been planning this for years, Ellen! You greedy b*tch!â
âI paid for her furnace, Mark,â I said, looking him dead in the eye. âI paid for her food. I paid for the doctor who kept her alive so you could sit here today and try to take her money. You didnât pay a dime.â
Todd stood up next, looking at the floor, refusing to look at me. âCome on, Kevin. Letâs go. Thereâs nothing here.â
They walked out of my motherâs house, slamming the screen door behind them. They didnât even say goodbye to her. They didnât care about her; they only cared about the bricks and mortar of her house.
Mr. Vance packed his briefcase, gave me a small, professional nod, and let himself out.
My mother sat at the table, her hands covering her face, weeping softly. âYouâre going to take my house, Ellen?â she sobbed. âYouâre going to throw your own mother out?â
I looked at her, and for the first time in twelve years, I didnât feel any guilt. I didnât feel that heavy, crushing weight behind my ribs.
âNo, Mom,â I said, putting the blue folder back into my purse. âIâm not going to throw you out. Youâre going to live here. And Iâm going to keep taking care of you, just like I promised Dad. But the house is mine. And when youâre gone, your sons wonât get a single penny of my hard work.â
That was three months ago. My brothers havenât called our mother once since that day. They donât check on her, they donât send cards, they donât exist to her anymore.
But I still go over every Tuesday and Thursday. I still make her tea, and I still help her with her garden. The house is quiet now, but itâs a clean sort of quiet. My hands donât shake when I open her mail anymore. I know my future is secure, and for the first time in my life, I feel completely free.
â
End of story â Part 5 of 5