I Found My Brother’s New TV Beside Mom’s Missing Medicine Money-Quieen - Chainityai

I Found My Brother’s New TV Beside Mom’s Missing Medicine Money-Quieen

By the time I pulled into my parents’ driveway, the evening had that tired, hot smell that comes off asphalt after a long day.

Somewhere down the street, a lawn mower coughed over a patch of dry grass, and the little American flag on my parents’ porch kept tapping the railing in the wind.

I remember noticing it because I was exhausted enough to focus on small things.

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The porch flag, the loose mailbox door, the grocery bag I had left on the passenger seat, and the folded cash in my purse all felt ordinary until I opened the front door.

That cash was the reason I was there.

My name is Marisol, I am thirty-four years old, and I have been bringing my mother money for her blood pressure medicine every month because she is sixty-eight and her fixed income barely stretches from one bill to the next.

I do not have a dramatic life.

I rent one small room, work six days a week, and keep a notebook on my dresser where I write down every bill before the month begins, because guessing is how you end up crying in a grocery store parking lot.

Gas, rent, phone, laundry, food, and the little envelope of cash I keep for my mother all sit on that page like they are people waiting to be fed.

That was my system.

It was not perfect, but it kept me honest.

Every month, no matter how tired I was, I gave my mother what I could for her medication because I knew she would never ask twice.

She would say, “Only if you can, honey,” even when we both knew she needed it.

She would fold the bills so carefully that it made me ache.

She would tuck them beside her prescription refill slip, pat my hand, and then apologize like being alive was an inconvenience.

My mother has always been that kind of woman.

She will serve the best piece of chicken to someone else and swear she is not hungry.

She will sit in a cold room and tell you the heater works fine.

She will defend a person who has hurt her because admitting the truth would hurt even more.

My older brother learned that about her years ago.

He learned where the soft spots were.

Five years ago, he moved into my parents’ house with his wife and their two kids because they were “going through a rough patch.”

Those were his words.

At the time, I believed him.

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