Mother Flew to Korea and Found Her Daughter’s Hidden Money Room-Neyney - Chainityai

Mother Flew to Korea and Found Her Daughter’s Hidden Money Room-Neyney

Teresa had spent twelve years telling herself that money was proof of safety. Every year, exactly 8 million pesos arrived from Korea, and every year she repeated the same sentence to anyone who asked.

“My daughter is fine.”

But when the house went quiet at Christmas, and María Luisa’s plate stayed empty again, that sentence began to rot inside her mouth.

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Teresa was 63 years old. She had been widowed young, and all the softness in her life had been poured into raising her only daughter. María Luisa had been the kind of child who folded her uniform carefully, shared food with classmates, and kissed her mother’s hand before leaving home.

When María Luisa turned 21 and fell in love with Kang Jun, Teresa tried to stop the marriage. It was not because he was Korean. It was because he was almost 20 years older, because his world was far away, and because his calm manners felt too polished.

“Mom, I know what I’m doing,” María Luisa had said.

Teresa gave in because mothers sometimes mistake determination for happiness. The wedding was simple. Within a month, María Luisa was gone.

At the airport, the girl who insisted she was ready cried so hard Teresa felt her daughter’s breath shaking through her coat. Teresa wanted to say, “Stay.” Instead, she said, “Take care of yourself.”

That was the first silence between them.

The second silence lasted twelve years.

The first year, Teresa asked when María Luisa would visit. The second year, she asked again. By the fifth, she no longer dared. Each time, María Luisa’s answers became shorter, and her smile on video calls seemed to arrive a second late.

“I’m very busy with work, Mom.”

That was always the line.

Then came the money. Exactly 8 million pesos every year, never late, never short, always with the same message: “Mom, always take care of yourself. I’m fine.”

Neighbors praised María Luisa. They called her generous. They said Teresa was lucky to have a daughter abroad who remembered her mother so faithfully.

Teresa smiled at them because explaining loneliness to people impressed by money is a useless thing.

You can have money on the table and still have an empty chair across from you.

Every Christmas, Teresa cooked as if María Luisa might walk in at any moment. She made sinigang, her daughter’s favorite, and watched steam rise from the bowl while the kitchen windows blurred with her own reflection.

This year, she stopped waiting.

A neighbor helped her buy the plane ticket and prepare her documents. Teresa did not tell María Luisa. She wanted to see the truth before anyone had time to arrange it for her.

The flight lasted more than four hours, but to Teresa it felt longer than twelve years. Her hands clung to the armrests. Her lips moved silently over prayers. When the plane landed in Korea, she stepped into bright airport noise and felt suddenly very old.

The taxi driver took her to the address María Luisa had given years earlier. The house was two stories, clean, and quiet. The garden had been trimmed neatly, but there was no warmth in it.

Teresa rang the bell.

No one answered.

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