З життя
Austin, your grandmother will never agree to this
“Austin, your grandmother will never agree to this. And neither will I,” Megan said, finding a burst of inner strength to speak firmly. “Stop trying to bully me. This conversation is over.”
Austin exhaled sharply, a loud, theatrical sigh that radiated pure disgust for his mother’s defiance. “I don’t give a single damn how you make it happen,” he spat out through his teeth. “Tell her that if she doesn’t sign the property over to us nicely, I’ll find a way to get the state to declare her unfit and put her in a nursing home. You know how it goes with old people — one bad fall, a fractured hip, and that’s the end of it.”
Megan’s blood ran cold. Could her own flesh and blood actually be capable of such cruelty? Her son was staring at her with flat, empty eyes, completely void of any human warmth. He was ready to blackmail his own grandmother just to secure a piece of real estate without having to qualify for a massive bank loan. “She’s old anyway, her time is short, and that house is supposed to be ours eventually,” he added coldly.
Megan stood up slowly, her breathing shallow. His words made her feel physically nauseous, and a sharp, rhythmic pounding started in her temples. She had raised a monster. All the bedtime stories, all the late-night heart-to-heart talks meant absolutely nothing. He was his father all over again.
“No, Austin. I will not help you do this,” she said, her voice quiet but unyielding.
Austin’s face twisted with intense rage. He stood up abruptly, towering over her, his large fists clenched tight. For a terrifying moment, Megan genuinely believed he was going to grab her and throw her to the floor. It was a horrifying realization. “So, you’re turning your back on me?” he hissed. “Fine. As far as I’m concerned, I don’t have a mother anymore.”
He turned around and stormed out of the house, slamming the front door so hard that the framed family photos on the wall rattled against the drywall. Megan was left entirely alone in the sudden silence of the kitchen. She sank onto a wooden stool, wrapped her arms tightly around herself, and wept bitterly. Deep down, a shameful wave of relief washed over her simply because he had left without physically hurting her — because subconsciously, she had been expecting a blow.
She didn’t reach out to him. And he never called her. One month went by, then two, and eventually three. Megan kept going to work, returning every evening to a dark, quiet apartment where the heavy silence allowed her darkest thoughts to crawl in and keep her awake. Finally, unable to take the isolation anymore, she dialed his number. Austin rejected the call immediately. When she tried one more time, she discovered her number had been completely blocked. From old friends, she later learned that the young couple was still stuck renting an overpriced apartment on the edge of town. A few weeks later, while looking through social media, she accidentally discovered that she had become a grandmother.
Every single day, she replayed his childhood in her mind, looking for where she went wrong. She had been at every single school meeting, sat with him through his homework, and paid for private tutors when he was failing his classes. But Austin had only insulted the tutors, and whenever she tried to set boundaries, he threatened to run away and never come back. Had she been too strict? Had she not loved him enough? Or should she have forgiven him even more? She had no answers.
Megan didn’t know what the future would hold for them. Maybe Austin would grow up and realize his mistakes one day, or maybe he never would. Maybe she would get to see her grandson, or maybe she never would. But as she sat alone in the quiet kitchen, she knew one thing for certain: if she had given in to his cruel ultimatum and betrayed her own mother, nothing beautiful could have ever grown from that darkness. And if doing the right thing made her a bad mother, then that was a cross she was willing to bear.”
