Her Pension Finally Arrived. Then Her Daughter Demanded Half-Candy

The moment Natalie heard my pension had finally been approved, she did not ask whether I was relieved.

She did not ask whether I slept better.

She did not ask whether forty years of hospital work had finally left me with enough room to breathe.

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She let herself into my house with her husband and sat down like my living room had already become part of their future.

The kitchen smelled like chicken broth, bay leaf, and onion when I heard the front door open.

My spoon scraped the bottom of the soup pot, and the steam clouded the window over the sink.

For one quiet minute before that, I had been thinking about how to make the pot last until Friday.

Then Natalie called, “Mom, are you home? We need to talk.”

I turned the burner down before I answered.

That is a habit after decades in hospitals.

You learn not to run toward every alarm.

You learn that panic wastes breath you may need later.

When I stepped into the living room, Adrian was already on my sofa with his knees spread and his elbows on his thighs.

He looked around the room as if he were measuring it.

Natalie stood near the coffee table with her arms crossed, tapping one nail against her sleeve.

The little American flag Sarah had tucked into the porch planter last summer moved faintly through the front window behind them.

I remember noticing that because everything else in the room felt too still.

“Mom,” Natalie said, “we heard your pension finally came through.”

I looked from her to Adrian.

“How did you hear that?”

She blinked, annoyed that I had not answered the question she wanted.

“You told Aunt Linda you were waiting on the final letter,” she said. “She said it was done.”

Of course Linda had said it.

My sister had never met a private piece of news she did not try to season for other people.

Natalie shifted her weight.

“So how much are you getting every month?”

I could have lied.

I thought about it for half a second.

Then I decided I was too old and too tired to shrink my own life just to make greed less obvious.

“Three thousand,” I said.

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