He Paid for Everything Until Mother’s Day Exposed Their Betrayal-mdue - Chainityai

He Paid for Everything Until Mother’s Day Exposed Their Betrayal-mdue

For ten years, Gabriel believed duty had a sound. It was the click of a light switch that still worked because he had paid the bill. It was water running, medicine bottles closing, and his mother sleeping without worrying about rent.

He was 33 years old, tired in a way sleep could not fix, and still carrying grief like an unpaid balance. His father’s death had changed the house quietly at first, then completely.

Teresa, his mother, was 60. After the funeral, she stopped working, and Gabriel did not argue. He told himself she had earned rest. He told himself sons did not keep score with widows.

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The house was in Gabriel’s name, bought through years at an industrial maintenance company. Night shifts, weekend overtime, emergency calls, and loans still followed him home every month in white envelopes and app reminders.

Iván, 28, lived there too. He was the younger brother everyone excused before he even failed. He loved ideas more than work: delivery routes, sneaker resale, used phones, small businesses that never opened.

Every plan ended with Teresa touching Gabriel’s arm and saying the same thing. “Leave him alone, Gabriel. He’s young. You’re always so bitter.” The words were soft, but they always landed like a slap.

Gabriel was not bitter. He was the person who fixed the water heater when it died, bought Teresa’s medicine, filled the refrigerator, and stretched his own lunch money so nobody else had to feel embarrassed.

His biggest mistake had been generosity disguised as convenience. Years earlier, he had given Teresa an additional credit card under her own name so she “wouldn’t have to ask him for money.”

At first, she used it for groceries, prescriptions, and small household things. Gabriel kept the limits modest, checked the statements, and treated the card like a gesture of respect rather than a risk.

Then the charges grew. A phone accessory here. Restaurant meals there. Rides, clothing, impulse purchases, outings with Iván. Whenever Gabriel questioned it, Teresa said the same sentence: “So now I have to beg in my own son’s house?”

That was the trust signal he had given her. Access. A card. A quiet promise that she would not need to plead for dignity. Over time, that access became something else.

It became permission.

Mother’s Day began before sunrise. Gabriel came home from an extra shift with oil still under his nails and a dull ache between his shoulders. The house was quiet enough to make the refrigerator hum sound lonely.

At 6:10 a.m., he washed his face with cold water and started cooking. Chilaquiles first, then café de olla with cinnamon because Teresa loved that smell. Steam fogged the kitchen window in pale streaks.

He had wanted to do more. He had wanted a larger cake, a better gift, maybe a proper dinner outside. But the week’s money had already been divided into electricity, water, groceries, loan payments, and Teresa’s medication.

So he bought a small cake and went to the Coyoacán market for flowers. He chose white roses because his father had always brought Teresa white roses when his legs were still strong.

The market paper was rough against Gabriel’s palm. The petals were cool and damp, wrapped tightly as though they were protecting themselves from the city heat. He carried them home carefully on the bus.

Inside the card, he wrote one honest sentence: even when he did not know how to say it, everything he did was for her. He did not write about money. He did not write about exhaustion.

He thought she would understand the rest.

Teresa came into the living room wearing a dark cardigan over a cream blouse. Iván was still in his room, though Gabriel had heard drawers opening and closing behind the door earlier that morning.

The table held chilaquiles, cinnamon coffee, and the small cake. The roses rested beside Teresa’s cup. For one brief second, Gabriel let himself believe the morning might be gentle.

Then Teresa picked up the bouquet as though it had insulted her.

“Flowers, Gabriel? Is that all I’m worth to you as a mother?” she asked.

The question struck the room cleanly. Gabriel stood with his hands still half-extended, the card trapped between his fingers, unable to decide whether to explain or simply disappear into silence again.

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