He Sent His Mother Back To The Airport, Then Her Seatmate Walked In-ruby - Chainityai

He Sent His Mother Back To The Airport, Then Her Seatmate Walked In-ruby

I flew across the country to see my son because I believed there were some doors a mother would always be allowed to walk through.

Even after years of shorter phone calls.

Even after birthdays became text messages.

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Even after Nick started saying he was busy in that polished voice people use when they want distance to sound like ambition.

I still believed that when he became a father, some old tenderness might come back.

The airport air followed me all the way to his porch.

It smelled like burnt coffee, damp wool, and the stale recycled breath of a long flight.

My knees throbbed from the 14-hour trip, and every step from the rideshare to his front door made my hips complain.

I was 62 years old, old enough to know better than to expect too much, but young enough in my heart to still want my son to be glad to see me.

In my left hand, I held the handle of a suitcase I had owned for ten years.

In my right arm, I carried a soft blue baby blanket I had knitted for three months.

I had stitched Leo’s initials into one corner, tiny and careful, because I imagined my newborn grandson wrapped in something made by hands that had once packed his father’s school lunches.

Nick used to sleep in a diner booth while I worked double shifts.

He would curl up beside his backpack under the yellow light, one sneaker hanging off the vinyl seat, his math homework spread beside a plate of fries I could barely afford.

When my shift ended, I would wake him gently and carry his books while he leaned against me, half asleep, trusting me completely.

That trust had paid for his college application fees.

It had paid for used textbooks, meal plans, dorm deposits, and the gas money I sent when he said everyone else had more than he did.

I thought he remembered.

I was wrong.

When the heavy oak door opened, Nick did not smile.

He looked at me the way people look at something left too long in the back of the refrigerator.

His fingers went to his nose.

At first, I thought maybe he was sick.

Then I saw his eyes move over my cardigan, my old suitcase, my damp shoes, and the blanket pressed to my chest.

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