The crayon drawing trembled in my hands, the colors swirling into a familiar face I had long since buried in my past. My granddaughter, with all the innocence of childhood, had unknowingly unveiled the truth my son and his wife had hidden for years.
Life had handed me my fair share of joy and heartbreak, triumphs and regrets. But nothing could have prepared me for this moment.
Raising my son Peter had been the greatest blessing of my life. He had grown into a wonderful man, a devoted husband to Betty and a loving father to their daughter, Mia. She was eight years old now—bright-eyed, endlessly curious, and the kind of child who carried sunshine wherever she went.
Peter and Betty had always made time for me. We spent holidays together, gathered for birthdays, and they often visited me in my cozy apartment downtown. But something had changed three years ago. The invitations to their home—once routine and warm—suddenly stopped.
There were always excuses.
“The guest room is being renovated,” Peter would say.
“We’re having plumbing issues,” Betty would add.
At first, I didn’t question it. People get busy, life gets in the way. Maybe they simply valued their privacy. But last Tuesday, I decided to surprise them.
I had found a beautiful antique music box at a flea market, one that reminded me of something Betty had admired months ago. Without thinking twice, I took the bus across town and showed up at their door, excited to see their faces when I handed over the unexpected gift.
Peter’s reaction wasn’t what I had anticipated.
“Mom!” His smile was forced, his eyes darting nervously to the side. “What are you doing here?”
“I wanted to surprise you,” I said, stepping inside before he could object. “I found something for Betty.”
He hesitated before nodding. “That’s… great. Let me just tell her you’re here.”
Their house no longer felt like the welcoming place I had once known. The air carried tension, and Peter’s stiffness only confirmed it.
Betty emerged from the kitchen, her expression mirroring his. “Martha! What a lovely surprise!” She hugged me tightly—too tightly.
Despite the awkwardness of my unannounced visit, they insisted I stay for dinner. We sat around the table, the familiar scent of Betty’s cooking filling the air, but the warmth I used to feel in their home had vanished. Mia chattered away happily, seemingly unaware of the unease between her parents.
Then, during dinner, Betty reached for her wine glass and frowned when she found it empty.
“We need another bottle,” she said. “I’ll grab one from the—”
“I can get it,” I offered, already standing. “Where do you keep them? The basement?”
Betty nearly knocked over her chair in her haste to stop me.
“Oh, no need!” she blurted. “I’ll get it!”
Before I could say another word, she disappeared down the basement stairs.
Peter, sitting beside me, suddenly became engrossed in cutting his chicken into tiny, identical pieces.
I narrowed my eyes. “Is everything okay?”
“Fine,” he said, avoiding my gaze. “Everything’s fine.”
Something was very, very wrong.
A few days later, Peter and Betty had an emergency at work and asked if I could watch Mia for the afternoon. I was thrilled to spend time with her.
She loved drawing, so we sat at their kitchen table, surrounded by crayons and colored pencils.
“Can I see some of your other drawings, sweetheart?” I asked.
Mia nodded enthusiastically and returned moments later with a folder full of artwork.
Flipping through pages of colorful sketches, I came across one that made my breath hitch.
It was a drawing of their house. But beneath it, in a space marked separately from the rest, was a stick figure with gray hair. Alone. In what was clearly the basement.
My heart pounded.
“Sweetheart,” I asked gently, “who is this?”
Mia smiled. “That’s Grandpa Jack! He lives downstairs.”
My fingers went numb.
Jack. My ex-husband.
The man who abandoned us twenty years ago.
The man I had erased from my life.
“Does Grandpa Jack live here?” I whispered.
Mia nodded. “Daddy says it’s a secret from you because it would make you sad.”
The moment Peter and Betty returned, I sent Mia upstairs to play. I waited until they were distracted, then walked straight to the basement door.
It was locked.
I knocked, my voice steady despite the storm raging inside me. “I know you’re in there.”
There was a long pause. Then, shuffling footsteps.
The door creaked open, and there he stood.
Jack.
Older, frailer, but unmistakably him.
His voice cracked as he uttered the last words I ever expected to hear.
“I’m sorry.”
A thousand emotions swirled inside me. Anger. Hurt. Confusion.
“Martha, please,” he said, stepping aside. “Come in. Let me explain.”
My feet moved before my mind could stop them.
The basement had been transformed into a small apartment—a bed, a couch, a tiny kitchenette.
“You’ve got five minutes,” I said, my voice colder than I intended.
Jack sank into an armchair, looking smaller than I remembered.
“I lost everything,” he admitted. “My job, my money, the life I thought I wanted.”
“Spare me the pity party,” I snapped. “Why are you here? How long has my son been hiding you from me?”
Jack sighed. “Three years. I went to Peter because… because I had nowhere else to go. I never expected him to forgive me, but he gave me five minutes. That’s all I asked for.”
I folded my arms, unwilling to let the bitterness go. “And then what?”
“I kept coming back,” Jack confessed. “Just to talk. Just to be near him. Then, after a fire destroyed my apartment, Peter and Betty took me in.”
“So, you’ve all been lying to me?” My voice shook.
“They were trying to protect you,” Jack whispered. “They didn’t want to hurt you.”
I turned to leave, my mind reeling.
When I reached the top of the stairs, Peter and Betty stood frozen, their faces pale.
“Mom—” Peter began.
“Go ahead,” I challenged. “Explain.”
His eyes filled with something between guilt and desperation. “I didn’t know how to tell you. I was afraid you’d make me choose.”
“You should have told me,” I said, my voice barely above a whisper.
“I was afraid,” Peter admitted. “Afraid you’d never forgive me.”
I looked at Jack again. The man who had broken me. The man I had spent two decades trying to forget.
“Mom,” Peter’s voice softened. “He’s dying.”
A lump formed in my throat.
“He doesn’t have much time left,” Peter continued. “I couldn’t just let him suffer alone.”
Tears pricked my eyes, but I blinked them away. “That doesn’t erase what he did.”
Jack looked at me, his gaze filled with regret. “I don’t expect forgiveness, Martha. I just wanted to make things right before it’s too late.”
I took a deep breath.
“I need time,” I finally said, stepping toward the door.
“Mom, please—”
“Not now, Peter.”
With that, I walked out, my mind heavy with questions I wasn’t ready to answer.
Now, sitting in my quiet apartment, I wonder: Can I forgive him? Should I?
What would you do in my place?