The door opened to reveal my mother. Gone was the wine glass, replaced instead by a shadow of worry on her face. “Elena,” she greeted, her voice softer than it had been in years.
“Mom,” I replied, handing her the letter. “This came for you.”
Her eyes widened slightly as she took the envelope, recognizing the sender’s seal. She paused, reading the outside, before stepping back to let me in. I followed her into the familiar dining room. The house smelled of freshly brewed coffee, a scent that used to soothe me but now served only as a reminder of the warmth we’d lost.
As mom opened the letter, I watched her expressions shift—a dance of confusion, disbelief, and finally, a creeping panic. Her hands trembled slightly as she set the letter down on the table. “This… this can’t be right,” she said, her voice quavering.
“What is it?” I asked, unable to mask the edge in my tone.
“It’s from the bank,” she began, her voice barely above a whisper. “They’re foreclosing the house.”
Silence enveloped us. It was as if the room itself was holding its breath, waiting for one of us to break the stillness. “How did this happen? You said you were doing fine.”
“I thought I was,” she retorted defensively but then softened. “I didn’t realize how behind we were. Your father always handled these things, and after he passed…”
There it was—the fragility that she had hidden so well beneath layers of pride and stubbornness. For the first time, I saw her not as the matriarch who had turned us away, but as a woman grappling with the loss of her husband and the ensuing chaos.
“I didn’t know,” she continued, tears welling up in her eyes. “I thought pushing you away would make things easier, but…”
I reached over, placing a hand on hers. “We can fix this,” I said gently. “But we need to work together.”
It was as much a promise to her as it was to myself. Rebuilding wouldn’t be easy, but for Hannah, for the family we were, and the one we could become, we would find a way. Together.