The Trash Bags, The Doctorate, And The Photograph Joy Feared-Quieen - Chainityai

The Trash Bags, The Doctorate, And The Photograph Joy Feared-Quieen

The night before my doctorate, I found out my whole life had been built on a secret my stepmother had carried until it nearly destroyed her.

My name is Lucas, and at the time I was living in a small apartment complex in St. Paul with the woman I called Mom.

Her real name was Joy, but everyone around us called her Jojo.

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She was not my biological mother.

She came into my life after my real mother died when I was five, and after my father William died three years later in what I was told was an accident, Joy stayed.

No one would have blamed her for leaving.

She had no blood claim on me, no money waiting for her, and no easy future tied to a grieving little boy with school fees, doctor visits, and nightmares.

But Joy stayed anyway.

By the time I was preparing to receive my PhD in Chemistry, I had spent years thinking of my graduation as the moment I would finally repay her.

I had studied on buses, in library corners, at our little kitchen table, and sometimes on the floor when Joy was sorting recyclables too late into the night and the table was covered with bottles.

I thought I understood sacrifice.

I did not.

That night, my black doctoral gown was laid across the bed like it belonged to somebody richer.

The apartment smelled like rain from the hallway, wet cardboard, old concrete, and the sharp metallic scent of crushed cans.

Joy sat on the floor sorting plastic bottles, soggy cardboard, and aluminum cans into separate bags.

Her hands were red and swollen.

The skin across her knuckles had split in several places, and every time she bent a bottle flat, I could see the little flinch she tried to hide.

“Mom, get some rest,” I told her.

“In a minute, son,” she said.

She did not look up because she knew I would see how tired she was.

“Tomorrow is your ceremony.”

That was how Joy loved people.

She did not give speeches about it.

She missed sleep, skipped treatment, collected bottles, packed food into old containers, and told you everything was fine before you could ask.

I was about to argue when the apartment door opened without a knock.

Mrs. Potts, our landlady, stepped inside carrying a grocery bag and wearing the kind of smile people use when they have already decided they are superior.

Her eyes went to Joy first, then to my gown on the bed.

“Still collecting trash at this hour, Joy?” she asked.

Joy gave a small embarrassed smile.

Mrs. Potts looked at me.

“If you’re receiving your doctorate tomorrow, Lucas, you’d better not bring that woman who smells like garbage.”

The sentence hit the room like something thrown.

For one second, the only sound was the rain dripping outside the hallway window.

Then a plastic bottle crumpled in Joy’s hands.

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