Eight months ago, I lost my husband.
We had spent forty years together in the home we built, and without him, it felt unbearably empty.
Those eight months of loneliness felt like a lifetime.
Then my son, Richard, came to visit me with an idea.
“You shouldn’t be by yourself, Mom,” he said gently. “Sell the house and come live with us. It’s time we were a real family again.”
His wife, Melissa, took my hand and smiled warmly. “Let us take care of you. You won’t have to worry about anything once you’re with us.”
I trusted her.
I had no idea that kindness could hide something else entirely.
So I sold my home.
And when the money came through, I gave a large portion of it to Richard and Melissa to help them pay off their mortgage.
Melissa had mentioned, almost in passing, that she’d been doing freelance work just to keep up with their expenses. I thought helping financially would ease their burden—and maybe give her more time with the twins.
Leo and Max were five years old, and they meant everything to me.
The first day I moved in, they nearly knocked me over at the front door, rushing to hug me.
Melissa stood in the kitchen doorway, smiling. “They love you already. This is going to be so good for them.”
And for a while, it really was.
The boys followed me everywhere. They climbed into my lap with their sticky little hands, asked for bedtime stories, and argued over who got to sit next to me on the couch.