Fri. Jun 26th, 2026

The kitchen light buzzed overhead while I folded the last of Ethan’s t-shirts on the counter.

Mark had left when Ethan was ten.

One month later, he was living with Vanessa, a coworker from his office.

“Sorry, babe. Cupid’s arrow,” he had told me at the door, like that explained anything at all.

I picked up two jobs that same week.

I packed lunches at midnight.

Mark had left when Ethan was ten.
I sat alone at every science fair, every band concert, every parent-teacher meeting where the chair beside me stayed empty.

I never complained where Ethan could hear me.

He had enough to carry.

What I could not stop was Vanessa.

Every weekend he came back from his father’s house with something new bruising him underneath.

I never complained where Ethan could hear me.
“Mom,” he had said once. “Vanessa wants me to call her the real mom.”

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