“I’ll come by tomorrow. I want to see what you gave everything up for.”
I cleaned—but I didn’t hide anything. The messy shoe rack stayed. The crayon marks stayed.
“This…” she whispered. “What is this?”
Her eyes landed on the faded green handprints outside Aaron’s room. Inside stood an old upright piano—worn, imperfect, one key stuck.
Aaron walked in, climbed onto the bench, and began to play.
Chopin. The same piece she’d forced me to practice until my hands ached.
“Where did he learn that?” she asked quietly.
“He asked,” I said. “So I taught him.”
Aaron handed her a drawing—our family on the porch. My mother was drawn in an upstairs window, surrounded by flowers.
“I didn’t know what kind you liked,” he said. “So I drew all of them.”
At the table, she said, “You could’ve been great, Jonathan.”
“I am,” I replied. “I just stopped performing for you.”
She finally admitted the truth—control had been her armor. Perfection, her safety.
“You lost us anyway,” I said. “Because you never let us choose.”
Anna spoke once. “Jonathan chose us. We’re not a punishment.”
My mother left without apology.
That night, she called again. Crying.
“I didn’t know it would feel like that,” she whispered. “Your home. The way your wife looks at you. The way your son smiles.”