I divorced my husband when our daughter Maria was only 10. I was a stay-at-home mom, so I barely made ends meet. At the same time, my ex didn’t have this problem, so he always bought extremely expensive things for Maria, spoiling her.
When Maria was 17, she chose her rich dad over me and left, saying I wasn’t her mother anymore. But recently, she called me, begging to come back. The voice on the other end of the line barely sounded like the confident, defiant teenager who once slammed the door in my face.
It was trembling, hushed, almost scared. I hadn’t heard from Maria in over four years. She didn’t even say hello.
She just whispered, “Mom… can I come stay with you for a while? Please.”
I sat on the edge of my thrifted couch, blinking like I hadn’t heard her right. The last time we spoke, she told me I was pathetic and jealous of her “real parent”—her dad, who had just gifted her a brand-new Mercedes for her high school graduation.
Meanwhile, I was scraping together coupons for groceries and working late-night shifts cleaning offices. So no, I wasn’t expecting this call. I asked her if she was okay.
There was a long pause before she said, “I just… I can’t be there anymore.” She didn’t elaborate. She didn’t have to. Something in her voice cracked wide open.
I told her yes. Of course. Come home.
She showed up that evening in an Uber with one small duffel bag. No Mercedes. No Louis Vuitton.
Just worn sneakers and a hoodie two sizes too big. Her eyes were swollen like she’d been crying for days. I wanted to wrap her in a thousand apologies and I love yous.
But I didn’t know where to start. So I just held her. For a long time.
She stayed in her old room, the one with the peeling paint and the unicorn stickers still on the closet door. At first, she barely spoke. Just ate quietly and disappeared back under her blanket.
I didn’t push her. I waited. After a week, she finally opened up.
She said her dad had remarried a woman named Clio. Tall, gorgeous, corporate—Maria called her “a walking Pinterest board.” At first, Clio had been polite. Then cold.
Then vicious. Apparently, Clio had two teenage sons who were treated like royalty. Maria became the invisible stepchild.
Her father? He didn’t notice. He was always traveling for business or stuck in Zoom calls.
When Maria complained, he accused her of being dramatic. Then came the ultimatum: Follow Clio’s house rules or move out. Maria had tried to stick it out.
But last week, Clio had “accidentally” donated all of Maria’s clothes to charity while she was at school. Everything except the duffel she had with her. When Maria cried, Clio smirked and said, “Now you know how your mother must’ve felt when you left her.”
That’s when Maria realized—she’d been used.
I listened in silence. My heart was breaking, but a part of me felt strangely validated. I’d been the villain in her story for so long.
Maybe now she saw the full picture. Still, I didn’t say “I told you so.” I just made her tea. We started to reconnect, slowly.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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