Her Son Gave Her Rice, But The Hidden Envelope Changed Everything-heyily

By the time Rose reached Lewis’s house, the rain had thinned into the kind of cold mist that clings to a person’s sleeves.

It was not enough to make anyone turn on their windshield wipers fast, but it was enough to soak a seventy-year-old woman through a cardigan.

Her cane clicked against the driveway pavement.

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Her shoes were old enough that water had found its way through the seams.

In the cloth bag hanging from her shoulder, sixty-eight cents knocked together like a cruel little joke.

She had counted it before leaving home.

She had counted it once at the kitchen table, once beside the refrigerator, and once with her palm flat against the front door because pride kept telling her to turn around before she ever stepped outside.

Sixty-eight cents.

Not enough for bread.

Not enough for eggs.

Not enough for the small carton of milk she had been watering down in her coffee so the mornings felt less empty.

Rose had never imagined herself walking to her son’s house to ask for grocery money.

She had imagined many things when Lewis was young.

She had imagined him graduating.

She had imagined him opening his own store one day, because he was always the kind of boy who took broken hinges and bent screws apart just to learn how things fit.

She had imagined him marrying someone steady, building a life, maybe calling on Sundays without being reminded.

She had not imagined standing outside his electric gate with rain on her face, rehearsing how to tell her own child she was hungry.

The brick house looked warm from the road.

Every window glowed.

A polished pickup sat under the porch light.

There were flower beds along the walkway, trimmed low and neat, the kind Clara liked because nothing grew wild where Clara could see it.

A small American flag near the porch stirred in the damp air.

Rose looked at it for a second and found herself thinking of all the small flags Lewis used to draw on notebook paper after school, back when his greatest worry was whether she had remembered to buy peanut butter.

She pressed the call button.

For a while, nothing happened.

Then the gate buzzed.

Clara opened the front door before Lewis appeared.

She did not step outside.

She stood in the dry light of the hallway with one arm folded across her chest and the other holding the edge of the door, as if Rose might drip too much rain onto the entry rug.

“What are you doing here?”

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