My son said at lunch, “We only invited you to be polite—don’t think everything revolves around you.” His fiancée smirked. I took one sip of tea, smiled, then stood up and left. A month later, the carriage house out back was rented out. Then I quietly ended every bit of support they’d been counting on, updated the gate access, and waited. That week, my phone lit up with message after message. And then I received the first visit.

32

My name is Patricia Lewis. I’m sixty-nine years old, retired now, and I spent more than three decades as a school principal. I’d like to think I was good at it—firm, fair, the kind of leader teachers respected and kids didn’t fear.

I live in Charleston, South Carolina, where the air can feel like warm cotton and the oak trees wear Spanish moss like old lace. These days, I stay in the old carriage house behind the main family home—the one my late husband, Gerald, left behind. He passed seventeen years ago.

Heart attack. One minute he was mowing the lawn, and the next he was gone. I was fifty-two.

Since then, I’ve done what I thought was right. I stayed close. I helped my only child, Richard, raise his boys after his wife passed from breast cancer four years ago.

I picked the boys up from school, made dinner when he worked late, paid for summer camps when things got tight. I kept everything running in the background while he rebuilt his life. I didn’t ask for much.

A thank you once in a while would’ve been nice, but I told myself love didn’t need applause. Then came Sunday. Richard invited me to brunch at the house.

Nothing unusual. But this time it was different. His new fiancée’s family was visiting for the first time.

They came in smiling—Southern, sweet, practiced. Her name is Noel. She’s young, maybe early forties, and she wears a lot of white even though she has a dog and two boys from a previous marriage.

The table was set beautifully, I’ll give them that. Fresh flowers, cloth napkins, fruit in little glass bowls that caught the sunlight. Noel served mimosas in tall flutes, though I stuck to tea the way I always do.

I brought my blueberry scones, warm in their little box, because I’ve always been that woman—the one who shows up with something homemade. Noel took them and set them aside like they were store-bought muffins. Her parents, Annette and Roy, talked about their retirement in Florida.

Someone mentioned golf. Richard laughed a little louder than usual, like he was trying to prove something. The whole thing felt like a performance.

Then came the moment I won’t forget. We were talking about the upcoming wedding. Noel said they might do something small in Asheville—maybe a vineyard, maybe a lodge tucked up in the Blue Ridge.

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