Her Daughter Asked For Dinner, But The Housekeeper Blocked The Gate-mdue - Chainityai

Her Daughter Asked For Dinner, But The Housekeeper Blocked The Gate-mdue

My daughter invited me to dinner after a year without speaking to me, and for six hours I let myself believe that one little message could undo everything.

It came through on a Tuesday evening while I was standing in my kitchen, wiping flour off the counter with a damp dish towel.

Mom, come over for dinner. I want to fix things. I miss you.

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I read it once.

Then I read it again.

Then I sat down at the table because my knees did not trust me.

For more than a year, my daughter Megan had moved through the world as if I had become someone she used to know.

She did not call on Sundays anymore.

She did not stop by after work with her purse sliding off one shoulder and a story already halfway out of her mouth.

She did not ask whether I had eaten, or whether my old car had started that morning, or whether the doctor had called about my blood pressure.

She sent short replies, then shorter ones, then nothing.

I had tried not to chase her.

That sounds dignified when you say it out loud, but the truth is uglier.

I sat with my phone in my hand more nights than I want to admit, typing three lines, deleting two, sending one, then staring at the screen like a fool.

Megan was my only child.

Her father left when she was eleven years old, right after Christmas, with two duffel bags and a promise to call that turned into birthday cards with no return address.

I raised her on work that left my hands smelling like bleach, buttercream, paper dust, and cheap coffee.

I sold used books out of boxes at flea markets.

I baked cakes for strangers who wanted roses piped in frosting but did not want to pay full price.

I cleaned offices after dark, when the business people had gone home and the conference rooms were full of empty cups and crumpled agendas.

Megan used to sleep in the back seat while I drove from one job to the next.

Sometimes I would look at her in the rearview mirror, her cheek pressed against her backpack, and promise myself she would never have to live like I did.

She graduated college because I worked.

She bought her first decent coat because I skipped new tires for two months.

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