When the alarm clock rang at 3:00 a.m., the world outside my window was still steeped in thick darkness. I fumbled to turn it off, my fingertips brushing the cold metal, and a shiver ran through me. These seventy‑nine‑year‑old bones weren’t what they used to be.
Every time I got up, it felt like restarting a rusty machine, my joints groaning under the strain. I sat up slowly, reached for the cane by my bed, and made my way to the kitchen by the dim glow of the nightlight. Inside the refrigerator, a fresh chicken breast I’d been saving was sealed in a container.
It was an organic piece my old neighbor, Dr. Arthur, had brought me last week. He said it was free‑range, perfect for a nourishing broth.
Daniel had been working so much overtime lately. He needed something to keep his strength up. I muttered to myself as I carefully placed the chicken into the slow cooker, adding carrots, celery, and a few herbs.
Once the water boiled, I turned the heat down low, covered it, and let it simmer. The kitchen soon filled with the fragrant aroma of vegetables. I sat on a small stool, watching the bubbles rise through the glass lid, just like when I used to make soup for my son when he was young.
I remembered how frail and sickly Daniel was as a child. I’d often stay up all night tending to his fevers. After my husband passed, I raised our boy alone, working at the textile mill during the day and taking on sewing jobs at night.
During the hardest times, there were three straight months when I lived on nothing but peanut‑butter‑and‑jelly sandwiches. But I never let my son miss a single meal with meat. The broth in the pot slowly turned a rich amber color, and the sky outside shifted from black to gray.
I checked the wall clock. 4:50. It was time to go.
Daniel always woke up at six, and I had timed it perfectly so I could get there just as he was getting up, ready for his first warm bowl of soup. I carefully poured the chicken soup into a thermos and wrapped it in a thick wool scarf. The January wind cut like a knife.
Leaning on my cane, I shuffled step by step toward my son’s house. He and his wife lived in a new condo complex not far from my old place. What was normally a twenty‑minute walk now took me double the time.
The streets were nearly empty, save for a few sanitation workers sweeping the sidewalks. My fingers gripped the thermos tightly, terrified it would get cold. The arthritis in my left leg throbbed with pain, but I gritted my teeth and kept going.
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