When you become a mother, you expect sacrifice. Sleepless nights, endless bills, meals going cold on the table while you cut meat into tiny pieces for your toddler. You do it without complaint because that’s what love demands.
At least, that’s what I always believed. I raised my son, David, alone. His father left when he was barely two, and from then on, it was just the two of us against the world.
I worked double shifts at a diner, cleaned houses on weekends, and set aside every spare penny I could scrape together. I didn’t mind the aching feet or the empty bank account, because when I looked at David’s face, all I saw was possibility. When he was in high school, he dreamed of becoming an engineer.
College wasn’t cheap, and scholarships weren’t enough. I made the decision that would shape the rest of my life: I cashed out the retirement savings I had been building since I was twenty-two. That money was supposed to be my safety net, my one bit of stability in old age.
Instead, it paid for tuition, books, and rent. I told myself it was worth it, that investing in my son’s future was more important than comfort in my twilight years. And in a way, it was.
He graduated, married, and eventually had a son of his own—my sweet grandson, Lucas. That boy became the light of my life. When his parents were busy, I was the one who picked him up from preschool, baked cookies with him on rainy afternoons, and sat with him in the backyard catching fireflies until bedtime.
Lucas adored me, and I adored him. He was thoughtful in ways most children aren’t. One day, he showed up at my little house with a mischievous smile and a plastic shopping bag.
“I got you something, Grandma,” he whispered, tugging at my sleeve. From the bag, he pulled out two toy walkie-talkies. Bright red plastic, oversized buttons, and a crackly speaker.
“Now we can talk every night before bed, even when Dad says it’s too late for phone calls,” he explained proudly. My heart melted. That night, long after he was tucked into his bed across town, the walkie-talkie on my nightstand crackled to life.
“Goodnight, Grandma. Did you brush your teeth?”
I laughed until tears came. “Yes, Lucas.
Did you?”
Every night after that, it became our ritual. He’d tell me about school, the books he was reading, or which kid was fastest on the playground. Sometimes he’d ask me silly questions like, “Do you think cats dream about fish?” And I’d answer with the seriousness such questions deserved.
Those walkie-talkie chats were the highlight of my days. They reminded me that, even though my body was slowing down and my bank account never seemed to stretch far enough, I still had something precious: the bond with my grandson. But one night, everything changed.
It was late, maybe close to midnight, when the walkie-talkie crackled unexpectedly. I fumbled for it, thinking Lucas was having trouble sleeping. Instead, I heard voices.
My son’s voice. David. At first, I thought he was just talking near Lucas’s room, and the toy had picked it up.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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