“My son threw me out of the house, and my daughter-in-law immediately threw a celebration, saying: ‘She’s finally gone!’ But after just one night, they were on their knees begging for my forgiveness.”

16

Chapter 1: The Exiles of Aspen Creek
The wind in Aspen Creek didn’t just blow; it hunted. It sought out the gaps in window frames, the space between scarf and neck, and the cracks in a broken heart. I stood in the hallway of the house I had purchased thirty years ago, my hand trembling as it hovered over the brass handle of my suitcase.

The leather was worn—vintage Louis Vuitton, a gift from my late husband, Arthur.

It had traveled with us to Paris, to Rome, to the warmth of the Caribbean. Now, it was being packed for a journey I had never anticipated: a forced exile into the freezing Pennsylvania night.

“I said get out, Mother! Are you deaf?”

The voice belonged to Mark, my son.

The boy I had nursed through scarlet fever.

The teenager I had bailed out of reckless driving charges. The man I had silently bankrolled when his start-up failed, shielding his ego from the bruising truth of his own incompetence. He stood by the fireplace, his face flushed with a mixture of scotch and manufactured rage.

Beside him stood Jessica, my daughter-in-law of two years.

She was leaning against the granite island of the open-concept kitchen—a kitchen I had paid to renovate for them as a wedding gift. She wore a silk robe, her arms crossed, a small, triumphant smirk playing on her lips.

She didn’t say a word. She didn’t have to.

She was the architect of this moment; Mark was merely the demolition crew.

“Mark,” I said, my voice surprisingly steady, though my insides felt like shattered glass. “It is five degrees below zero. The roads are iced over.”

“Then you better start walking,” Mark snapped, throwing a hand toward the door.

“We’re done, Mom.

We’re done with your… your hovering. Your constant judgment.

Jessica can’t breathe in this house with you watching her every move. We need our space.

My house, my rules.”

His house.

The words hung in the air, heavy and absurd. I looked at the deed transfer papers in my mind’s eye—signed over to him three years ago, with a naive trust that blood was thicker than ink. I had retained a ‘life estate’ verbally, a gentleman’s agreement between mother and son, assuming he would never cast me aside.

It was the foolishness of a mother who forgot that children grow up, and sometimes, they grow crooked.

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