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She was ready to sell everything – until she heard the truth behind the door…

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Dear Diary,

How can you even think of selling it? I cried, halflost, as I looked at my son. Where am I supposed to live then? In a flat over the garden? In a railway carriage? Have you really decided to turn our home into a nursinghome?

Mother, why do you start this again Christopher sighed.

Do you expect me to hand you a washingmachine box? she raised her voice a notch higher. Have you lost your mind, Chris?!

Please, dont shout. I was only suggesting we talk about the possibilities

What possibilities are there? A house isnt a trinket you can offload when times get tough! she snapped, pulling herself away from the kitchen table. I was born here, you grew up here. And you you want to put it on the market!

Just then the neighbour, Lydia Whitmore, slipped in without a knock.

Sophie! What are you doing, rooted to the spot? You swore youd plant all the vegetable beds this year. Last winter you nearly froze! Where are your plans for the garden?

Lydia, I tried honestly Sophie lowered her eyes. The seedlings have only just pushed up, and I cant bring myself to pull them out

Stop the pullout! I gave you Igors numbera farmer from Lymingtonjust a month ago! He could turn the whole field over for you and keep it thriving. Plant something useful instead of those roses you waste your years admiring.

Chris mentioned maybe some friends would come over in summerbarbecue, bonfire. I have lilacs and roses

Those roses of yours! Lydia scoffed. In the past five years your son has turned up three times. And each time with a crate of beer, not a grill.

He works. He has a lot on his plate

Remember that winter when everything was snowed under? No food, no medicine! Good thing I dropped by. Where was your hardworking son then? You couldnt even get a phone call!

He always comes when I call

Sophie, youre like a schoolgirlbelieving and waiting. Time is slipping by. You need to use your head, not just your heart. Those beds are more useful than a rose bush!

Maybe I will finally make the beds, where the lilacs have already gone to seed

Thats the spirit. And hows your daughter?

Same as ever. Chris only pops in for birthdays or New Yearsnothing more.

The less often he visits, the less you have to worry about. Im not trying to rush you, but things are only getting quieter

I grew up in the hamlet of Bramley, just outside York. My husband died on the motorway twenty years ago, leaving me alone with the children. My first child, Evelyn, was bright and learned to wash and cook before most kids. Christopher arrived later, when I was already over forty; the age gap between us is fifteen years. Different times, different upbringings.

Evelyn was the first to leave.

Mum, Im getting married. she said.

To whom? That Tom from the village? I wont let you. He has no trade, no education, no culture!

This is my life, Mum. Im eighteen now.

Have you looked at his stomach? You wont find any soul in therejust a pile of fat!

Its not about looks. Hes kind, smart. He even got a job in the city.

And youre going to go with him? And leave me here alone?

Ill study and live on my own.

I wept and begged, but Evelyn packed a suitcase, flung it out the window, and vanished. No letters, no callsjust occasional gossip through acquaintances.

Christopher stayed with me for years. He built a little retreat in the garden: a gazebo, a swing, a grill, a tidy lawn, some flowers. No vegetable beds, no potatoes.

Mum, why do you need vegetable beds? The new supermarket in Bramley has everythingpotatoes, courgettes, greens. No need to strain your back.

Well, weve always kept things for ourselves

That was once. Its the twentyfirst century now!

I agreed. Life was modest but cosy. Christopher brought food, medicine, and drove me to the doctor. Then he met a girl, Marina, and they married. I welcomed her, but we never quite clicked. I never hid my disdain for country life, especially toward my motherinlaw.

During his regular visits, Christopher would always hug me, unload groceries, and set the table.

Mum, I need to talk. I have an idea Its very profitable.

More business talk?

Mum, developers are buying up land in Bramley! They want to build a little cottage estatefull infrastructure, everything you could wish for. If we sell the house with the plot, we could buy a nice onebed flat in York and still have money left for a startup fund.

Wait what about me? Where will I live?

Mum, dont start this. We could think about a care home or rent a flatjust not on the high street!

You want me in a flat? In a garden where every hedgerow is family history? Are you serious? This is our family home!

Mum, its just a house. Old, awkward. As long as the price holds, we should sell.

Never! I clenched my fists. As long as Im breathing, this house stays. I wont even mention it in my will!

Christopher snapped, snatched the keys, and walked out without a goodbye.

I stepped into the yard. A rose bush, halfbloomed, stood on the flowerbed. In one hand I held a spade, in the other an axe. I tried to turn the flowerbed into a vegetable patch, but I couldnt move it an inch.

Still struggling? Lydias voice called from beyond the fence.

Ive no strength. Neither in my hands nor in my heart.

Its too late! The seasons wasted. And who knows if Christopher will ever come back.

What would you advise?

Think clearly. Do it right youll have that onebed flat in York. A clinic nearby, a shop, heating, neighbours. Civilization.

I lay awake all night, turning the thoughts over. At dawn I caught a bus to York, to Christophers flat, hoping for a calm conversation.

I went up to the third floor, paused at the door, and heard a voice from inside:

Vera, she wont sell! Stubborn as a mule!

Then be the labourer! What business do I have to keep? Were on the edge, and youre fussing! Let it rot in Bramley!

I froze, then pounded the door with fury.

Mum? Christopher answered.

Thank you, son, for already burying me! my voice trembled. I came to talk, to make peace. And now know this: I will not sell! Never! Id rather be buried in the earth than hand it over to your venture!

Mum

Get out with your phantom! Let her parents sell apartments! My house is not yours to touch!

I turned and left. I spent the night on the station platform, returned home at sunrise, lay in bed for three days, then finally gathered the axeyet I could not bring myself to swing at the roses.

The next morning someone knocked at the back gate.

Whos there?

Mum, its me. Evelyn.

Evelyn?! I froze. My little girl

Mum, how are you?

I my voice cracked.

Christopher called. He says youve gone mad, you dont want to sell the house. I told him, Go away. He thought youd already given up but I realised its time to come back.

My dear but we

When was that? I have three children now. And I understand you perfectly!

Children?

Two daughters and a son. And Romhes lean, into sport, works in IT.

And you?

Well be visiting on weekends. Ill bring groceries, everything you need. Were close now, Mum.

The vegetable beds?

You dont need beds any more. You have grandchildren now.

Tears streamed down my cheeks as I embraced my daughter. The old house still stands, its walls breathing the same stories, and for once I feel the weight of the past loosening, replaced by the gentle promise of new roots.

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