I, Seretha, gave everything for my granddaughter’s future—every cent, every exhausting double shift, every hope I set aside. But when Liora made a crushing choice, I faced betrayal, sorrow, and the strength of tough love. What followed was a lesson in family, redemption, and a love that never surrenders.
In the days when milk arrived in glass bottles and Elvis was just a hopeful trucker, life seemed gentler, more present. I’ve witnessed assassinations, Civil Rights struggles, Vietnam, 9/11, and now people filming dance videos on the street, which baffles me still. I raised three children in a home with fragile walls but boundless love.
I lost my cherished husband, Gavren. I worked endless shifts at a diner until my feet gave way and my hands stiffened with age. Now, I move more slowly.
My fingers no longer weave braids easily, and my knees protest in harsh weather. Yet, I took pride in the life I carved out. It wasn’t flawless or simple, but every mark, every worry-filled night, was for those I held dear.
Betrayal, though, cuts deep into the soul. That’s why Liora’s actions nearly shattered me. She was once my greatest joy, until greed and deceit tainted her heart.
After Gavren’s passing, my means were modest—a small pension, Social Security, and tips tucked into envelopes or a jar beneath the sink. Still, I swore to save all I could for Liora’s future, not for myself, but for her. Liora came into my life at 61.
Her father, my son Tormen, was lost to addiction. Her mother, Vionelle, vanished when Liora was six, never reaching out again, not even for birthdays. I didn’t expect it, but I became a mother again, with joints that creaked and hands too frail to hold a brush well.
Still, I gave my all. I made her school lunches, sketching hearts on napkins. I read bedtime stories multiple times if she wished.
I braided her hair, though my fingers throbbed. Late at night, I’d watch her sleep, murmuring prayers into the darkness, hoping love could reach the heavens. “Please, let her have more than I ever did.
She’s worth it all.”
I saved tirelessly—clipping coupons like a second job, baking pies for church sales for 12 years, skipping new shoes until mine fell apart. I didn’t repair the roof when shingles loosened in storms. I walked to the store, even when cold pierced my coat.
All of it was for Liora. Over time, I gathered just over $42,000—not enough to gift her the world, but enough to unlock a path forward. While folding clothes, I practiced my words: “Liora, this is for your education, your independence, the life you’re destined for.” That was my vision, and I believed in it wholly.
But when Liora turned 16, something shifted, like milk turning sour over time. The girl who snuggled with books and asked about stars began slipping out at night. I’d hear her giggles on the lawn, voices drifting in, and a stranger’s perfume lingering.
At 18, she bleached her hair, added extensions, painted her nails bold colors. Her textbooks sat ignored, her phone always buzzing. One evening, I found her dancing in the kitchen, wearing my old Sunday dress, cut short.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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