Love wears many faces. In life’s quietest moments, we often realize that our deepest regrets aren’t the words we spoke but the love we failed to see. This is the story of a son who abandoned his mother out of shame, only to return years later and find a letter that brought him to his knees in tears.
Once, in a small village, lived a poor mother and her son.
Let’s call them Mercy because her heart knew only how to give, and Rock because… you’ll understand soon enough. The morning sun cast long shadows across the dusty path as Mercy walked her son home from school.
She adjusted the black fabric patch covering her left eye socket, painfully aware of the whispers that followed them like autumn leaves in the wind. Her worn dress and patched apron spoke of poverty, but it was her face that drew stares — the covered hollow where her left eye should have been.
“Rocky, sweetie, how was school today?” she asked, reaching for his small hand.
The eight-year-old jerked away, his shoulders hunched beneath his secondhand backpack. “Don’t touch me,” he muttered, moving to walk several paces ahead. “Everyone laughs at me because of you.”
A group of children passed by, their whispers carrying on the breeze.
“There’s the witch-boy,” one said, causing the others to snicker.
Rock’s face burned with shame. Mercy quickened her pace to catch up with him.
“Sweetheart, please wait,” she pleaded. “We can talk about this.
I heard about what happened at recess.
Mrs. Peterson told me —”
“She told you how Tommy called you a one-eyed witch?” Rock spun around, his face red with anger and shame. “How everyone laughed?
How they said I must be cursed to have a mother like you?”
“Tommy doesn’t understand —” Mercy began.
“No one understands!” Rock shouted, his small fists clenched. “Do you know what else they say?
They say you probably did something evil to deserve losing your eye. And that’s why Dad left us!”
Mercy’s remaining eye dimmed with hurt, but she kept her voice gentle.
“I’m sorry, baby.
I know it’s hard.”
“Why can’t you be normal like other mothers?” Rock’s voice cracked. “Sarah’s mom baked cupcakes for the class today. All the kids loved them.
But me?
I just want to disappear when you come to school. I hate you!
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
TAP → NEXT PAGE → 👇
