
âŚYou will always be his mother,â she said softly.
Her words caught me off guard. I expected anger, maybe even threatsâbut not that. For a moment, the room fell silent. I looked at her, trying to understand the smile on her face. It wasnât mocking like I first thought. It was tired⌠almost sad.
âYou will always be his mother,â she repeated, âbut Iâm the one raising his son.â
My heart tightened. The mention of my grandson made the grief rush back like a wave. I hadnât even had the strength to visit as often as I should these past three months. Losing my son had broken something inside me.
âIâm not trying to erase you,â she continued. âBut life didnât stop when he died. I still have to move forwardâfor me and for our child.â
I clenched my hands. âMoving forward with another man already?â I asked bitterly.
She looked down for a moment. âYou think itâs easy? You think I wanted this?â she whispered. âEvery day I wake up and remember heâs gone. But our son still needs stability. He still needs a future.â
Her words made the anger inside me slowly fade into something heavierâguilt.
âAnd the money?â I asked quietly.
âThat money was meant to help raise his child,â she replied. âYour grandson. Not for me⌠for him.â
I thought about the little boy who had my sonâs eyes and laugh. The boy who would grow up without his father. Suddenly the $90,000 didnât feel like something to fight over.
It felt like something my son would have wanted used for his child.
Tears filled my eyes. âYou promise it will go to him?â
She nodded. âEvery dollar.â
For the first time since my son passed away, the distance between us didnât feel like a wall anymore.
âI donât want to lose my grandson too,â I said quietly.
âYou wonât,â she replied. âBut we have to stop fighting.â
And in that moment, I realized something painful but trueâŚ
Grief had made us enemies. But love for the same boy could still make us family.Â