I am sixty-eight this year, an age people often say is for enjoying a comfortable retirement surrounded by children and grandchildren. But that was not my reality. I, Carol, a retired teacher, lived my days like an unpaid maid in the very house my husband and I had worked our entire lives to buy.
The alarm clock never had a chance to ring twice. At five in the morning, while the entire city of Chicago was still wrapped in a dim, hazy fog, I was already quietly out of bed. I didn’t dare turn on the hallway light, relying only on the faint glow from the streetlights outside to find my way down to the familiar kitchen.
As two pots of oatmeal bubbled on the stove, I turned to deal with the mountain of dirty laundry in the basket. Daniel’s clothes were fine, but Jessica’s had to be washed separately by hand. They were all expensive brand-name items, and she never tired of reminding me: “Mom, remember to be gentle.
The washing machine will ruin the fabric fibers.”
At precisely seven o’clock, when everything was ready and the dining table was set, the two bedroom doors on the second floor finally opened one after the other. Daniel came downstairs first, letting out a long yawn and saying lazily, “Morning, Mom.”
I responded with a smile, a smile that had become an instinct. “You’re awake, son.
Come eat, while it’s hot.”
He slowly sat down at the table, picked up a bowl of oatmeal, and ate mechanically. His eyes swept over me without a trace of warmth, as if I were just another piece of furniture in the house. Shortly after, Jessica also came down, wearing a sleek satin pajama set.
She didn’t even greet me—just walked straight to the table and frowned at her bowl of steel-cut oats with berries. “Mom, why are the oats so watery today?” Her voice was drawn out, full of displeasure. “And the berries are mushy.
How long did you cook this? Didn’t I tell you it needs to simmer for at least twenty minutes?”
“I let it simmer for a full twenty minutes,” I said quickly. “Maybe it was the berries I bought today—”
“Was it a problem with the berries or a problem with you?” Jessica interrupted, slamming her spoon down on the table with a sharp clank.
“You always have an excuse. I work a long day. I’m tired enough as it is, and I can’t even come home to a decent meal.”
I lowered my head, my hands clasped tightly together, a bitter lump forming in my throat, unable to say a word.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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