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When my father remarried after my mother’s passing, I struggled to call his new wife “Mum”—but over time, she proved herself deserving of that name.

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My mother battled illness for years. When she was twenty-seven and my father thirty-one, she slipped awaylike mist on the Thames. There were three of us in our strange little family. The youngest, me, had yet to toddle past two autumns. My father, adrift, needed a wifereally, a mother for usbecause the days pressed heavy and he couldnt find his way alone. Half a year later, he visited an old acquaintance and asked her to lend her daughter to him. The lady barely listened, her blessing fell like rainswift and sure. So a new mother, twenty-one and full of dreams, joined our peculiar household. Ellen swept through the house like a gusty breeze, set things straight. With her own savingspounds, not penceshe bought rolls of fabric and stitched school uniforms for two of us, cobalt blue and neat. The older siblings took to calling her Mum right away, but I did not. My tongue stumbled and the word wouldnt come, as if hidden behind a locked door. I learned late to speak, and everything seemed more tangled for me. One afternoon, I showed Ellen how my real mother always wore her hair in a low bun, twisted near the nape, like a careful knot. From then on, Ellen wore her own hair in that same bunher crown, gentle and quiet.

Yet I didn’t call her Mum, not even then. My father conjured a little adventureEllen baked my favourite apple pie, thick with cinnamon, and everyone gathered round the table. They all flocked to my pie, and I wasnt allowed near it unless I called Ellen “Mother.” So strange, so dreamlikea pie as ransom for a word. Three years later, Ellen birthed her first child, our fourth sibling. After that, the fog rolled inthings became harder for us. Father couldnt find work in his old trade, so he joined a local farm, tending sheep and working the land. Mother Ellen worked there, too, her hands roughened by rural life. Four years passed, and another baby arriveda second for Ellen. She never divided us into “hers” and “not hers,” but gathered us all like a bouquet.

Five years later, Ellen fell ill with the same shadow that took my first mother. By then, my elder siblings were off at university in distant citiesManchester, Bristol. Ellen was in hospital, and I visited every day, like a ghost in the corridors. Shed tell the doctors: “I cant be ill, there are little ones waiting for me at home.” Ellen fought and she conqueredthe disease retreated. Our joy had no boundaries. She suffered, but she was mightier than the storm.

When it seemed life might return to normal, we began to lose those closest to us. Six months later, Ellen and Fathers eldest son was planning his wedding. On the eve of celebration, he vanished into the night. On the thirty-sixth day, he was found beneath the earthfound and laid to rest. After this, I moved back in with my parents; I couldn’t bear to leave Ellen alone. Next, my father passed away. Then my older brother. Later, Ellens youngest grandsona son to my little sister. Their whole family was caught in an accident, but only the little boy was harmed.

I am stunned, bewilderedhow, after enduring such a dreamscape of grief, did Ellen keep her kindness, gentle warmth, and love? She raised five children, tended her grandchildren, and now cradles two great-grandchildren. Each morning, she rises early, cleans every corner, and settles in her armchair to knit tiny socks and hats, clicking her needles softly for her loved ones. For us, her children, its a delight to spend our free hours in her company. Even as age creeps in, she always has stories to share, laughter to spill. Her love, impossibly vast, wraps us alllike a quilt stitched from the odd fabric of the dream.

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