That was the first shift.
Mom got a part-time job with a local catering company because the owner, Mrs. Alvarez, knew her from church and needed help.
At first, Mom downplayed it.
“I’m just filling in.”
After a month, Mrs. Alvarez called during dinner and asked if Mom could manage an entire wedding reception because “nobody keeps a kitchen running like you do, Kayla.”
Mom hung up looking stunned. After that, she began to change—not in the way Dad had claimed. She bought herself new shoes. She laughed more.
She cut her hair to her shoulders because, as she said, “I’m tired of tying it back.”
We still heard about Dad through his sister, Lydia.
Aunt Lydia was the only one on his side who didn’t pretend we imagined what he did. She came by one Sunday with store-bought cookies and gossip she clearly didn’t enjoy sharing.
“That man has always cared more about looking successful than actually being it,” she muttered when Mom wasn’t in the room.
“What does that mean?” I asked.
She pressed her lips together. “It means don’t believe what you see on his Instagram.”
“We stopped looking a while ago. Even Nora blocked him, and she used to check it constantly.”
Lydia nodded. “Good. That’s for the best.”
A year passed. There were still quiet nights, still moments when the damage showed.
But Mom wasn’t broken the same way anymore. She had her own income, her own routines. She rebuilt her life without waiting to be chosen.
Then one evening, the past came back.
Mom was baking because she wanted to, not because anyone expected dessert. The kitchen smelled like vanilla and brown sugar. Ben was sneaking cookie dough when her phone rang.
Mom glanced at the screen. “Lydia.” She answered and put it on speaker.
“Kayla,” Lydia said, her voice shaking, “you need to come here. RIGHT NOW.”
We all froze.
“What happened?” Mom asked.
There was a pause.
Then my aunt said something that made Mom go completely still.
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