The sharp scent of detergent burned my nostrils as I knelt on the cold wooden floor, scrubbing the same spot over and over.
My knees throbbed with pain, but stopping wasn’t an option. I had learned that long ago. In this house, resting was considered laziness, and laziness was always punished.
The bucket beside me was half-empty, the water already gray. My hands were raw, cracked, and trembling, yet I kept moving. I had cleaned these floors so many times that I could trace every scratch in the wood with my eyes closed.
On the sofa behind me, my daughter-in-law Laura and her mother sat comfortably, legs crossed, cups of coffee in hand. They laughed softly, scrolling through their phones, occasionally lifting their feet just enough so I could wipe underneath them. To them, I wasn’t family. I was furniture. Something useful, silent, and easily ignored.
Then I heard the front door open.
My heart dropped.
I instinctively lowered my head and scrubbed faster. If the floor wasn’t spotless, Laura would raise her voice again. She always found something—too much water, not enough shine, the wrong detergent. I braced myself for another humiliation.
“Mom?”
The sound of that voice froze me completely.
I knew it anywhere. I would recognize it in a crowd of thousands, even after years of silence.
Slowly—afraid that my eyes were lying to me—I lifted my head.
A man stood in the doorway, dressed in a military uniform, dusty from travel, a heavy backpack hanging from his shoulder. His posture was straight, disciplined… but his eyes were tired.
It was my son.
Alex.
My Alex, who had been away for five long years.
His face shifted in an instant.
The relief of coming home vanished when his gaze landed on me—on my old apron, my tangled hair, my knees pressed against the floor like a servant begging forgiveness.
“Mom…” he whispered. “Is that you?”
No one spoke.
Laura’s mother leaned back casually and placed her feet on the coffee table, as if nothing unusual was happening. She sipped her drink slowly, deliberately, making sure I didn’t disturb her comfort.
“You’re back earlier than expected,” Laura laughed nervously, nearly spilling her coffee. “We thought you’d come next week.”
Alex didn’t answer her.
He walked toward me and knelt down, right there on the floor. Gently, he took my hands in his. When his fingers closed around mine, I felt him flinch. My skin was rough, scarred, and cold.
“What is going on here?” he asked, his voice low and shaking.
“She likes to stay busy,” Laura’s mother said quickly, forcing a smile. “Cleaning is good for older women. Keeps them useful.”
Alex stood up slowly.
He looked at the room. At the untouched cups. At the spotless sofa. At me—still on my knees.
Something hardened in his eyes.
And then he did something no one expected.
Alex dropped to his knees in front of me.
Not to clean.
Not to obey.
But to embrace me.
His arms wrapped around my shoulders, and his body shook as he held me the way he had when he was a little boy afraid of thunderstorms.
“Forgive me, Mom,” he cried openly. “Forgive me for leaving you alone. Forgive me for trusting the wrong people. I didn’t know… I swear I didn’t know.”
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