
After her arrival at my firm, I lost sleep for weeks.
My colleagues sensed I was shaken. My guardian, Jean Crawford, phoned and inquired if I felt fine. I wished to reply yes. I wanted to trust that I’d hidden everything deep enough that her return wouldn’t rattle me.
Yet it did.
I recalled the legal battles. How my mother gazed blankly forward while I spoke, never once catching my gaze. I recalled the way she attempted to argue I was “merely rebellious.” That she had “zero clue” what Craig had intended. As though her name on the bank slip signified nothing.
Now she’d returned, seeking mercy like it was a deal.
She delivered notes. Left recordings.
Once, she actually lingered outside my flat—resting in a battered car with a sack of burgers and a manual note that stated:
“I’m proud of what you achieved. Can we chat?”
I stayed silent. I didn’t unlock the door. I didn’t toss the meal away either. I just… lingered in my corridor and watched the bag for a long while.
I reviewed her legal folder. I kept it all—images, reports, accounts. Eight years felt short. She earned release early via “proper conduct.”
She was free. But I was still trapped.
One midday, I received a ring from a local charity. A lady named Helen said she was aiding ex-convicts with transition. She mentioned my mother desired to join one of the therapy circles I managed.
I refused.
Helen questioned softly, “Is there any piece of you that trusts she’s attempting?”
I hesitated.
Then uttered, “Is attempting worth more than what she stole?”
Because here’s what she stole:
My youth.
My belief in the term “mother.”
My power to sleep through the night without securing every latch on my door.
My pride, which I had to reclaim with counseling and time and ache.
And now she sought… what? Finality?
I visited my doctor.
“I don’t seek vengeance,” I remarked. “But I also don’t wish to be the person who allows her to change the narrative.”
“You don’t owe her a thing,” my doctor answered. “Mending doesn’t demand reconnecting.”
That stayed with me.
The next instance she tried to ring, I barred the line.
But I wasn’t finished yet.
If she craved mending so much, I would grant her the one gift she’d never held: responsibility.
She kept striving.
She posted a note to my firm—handwritten, chaotic, filled with semi-remorse and self-woe.
“I was unwell. I was hopeless. I know I wasn’t present, but I still dream of you every day. I didn’t grasp how to be a parent. But I’m striving now.”
I scanned it thrice.
I nearly discarded it.
But then I opted to reply.
“You wish to know what I recall?
I recall lurking in the cupboard when your partners got rowdy. I recall deciding between starvation and crying out. I recall yelping for aid and having nobody arrive—until the day I forced them to hear.
You claim you were unwell.
I was a kid.
And you traded me. For fifty bucks.
That wasn’t craving. That wasn’t hopelessness. That was treason.
I remade myself. I shaped something from the wreckage you left behind. I bear marks you will never witness.
I do not owe you a new start.
You had your first shot. You preferred a high over your girl.
And now, I prefer calm over your shadow.
Do not reach me again.”
I mailed it registered.
A week later, I received a notice of delivery.
No answer. No petals. No voice calls. Only stillness.
And somehow, that stillness felt like peace.
Years prior, I thought mercy meant welcoming her back. Now I grasp it means letting myself walk on without her. Without her pleas. Without her redemption story.
I assist people like me now—youths in webs they didn’t request, targets of parents who preferred themselves over their offspring.
Sometimes they wonder, “Should I speak to them once more? Should I excuse?”
I never command their actions.
But I always state this: “You don’t have to ignite yourself to keep someone else cozy.”
I didn’t destroy the path between us.
She traded it for fifty bucks.
And I’m not fixing it.