My mom, Shirley, is 82 years old and the backbone of our family. She planted her own tomatoes, fixed her own fence, and once chased a raccoon off her porch with a broom while laughing.
The stroke came out of nowhere.
Last week, one minute she was pruning roses in the backyard, and the next, she was face down in the dirt.
Mrs. Patterson from next door saw her fall and called 911.
The stroke came out of nowhere.
By the time my brother Dave and I reached the hospital, Mom was in the intensive care unit (ICU), hooked up to machines. When Dave called his wife, Brenda, she refused to come.
He told me she said, “I can’t go in there. I’m too emotional. I won’t be able to handle seeing Mom in the ICU.”
That should’ve been my first warning.
***
The doctor didn’t sugarcoat Mom’s condition.
“Prepare yourselves. She suffered a massive stroke,” he said quietly.
Dave gripped the back of a chair. I felt like the floor had shifted under my feet.
She refused to come.
Inside the ICU, Mom looked small as she lay unconscious. I kept telling myself that as long as she was breathing and her heart was beating, that meant something.
A nurse approached us gently. “She was admitted in muddy jeans and sneakers. It would help if you could bring comfortable clothing for when she’s stable enough.”
“I’ll go,” I said. “Dave, you stay here.”
He nodded. “Call me if you need me.”
I promised I would.
“Dave, you stay here.”
***
Mom’s house sat exactly 20 minutes from the hospital. I remember counting the red lights because I needed something to focus on. When I turned into her driveway, I noticed tire tracks cut deep into the lawn.
At first, I thought maybe the ambulance had backed in too far.
But then I saw the front door slightly ajar.
My stomach dropped.
I pushed it open slowly. “Hello?”
The house answered with an echo.
I noticed tire tracks cut deep into the lawn.
The living room looked wrong.
The Victorian settee that had sat under the window since I was a child was gone. The Persian rug that Mom vacuumed every Sunday was also missing.
I walked further inside.
The walnut dining table that my late Dad restored by hand? Gone.
The silver tea set passed down through three generations? Also gone.
The glass-fronted cabinet? Empty.
I stood in the middle of the room, trying to breathe.
The living room looked wrong.
This wasn’t random. Whoever did this knew exactly what to take.
I ran outside, crossed the yard, and called out to Mrs. Patterson.
She opened the door before I had knocked. “Oh, honey, I was going to call you.”
“Did you see who was here?”
She hesitated. “Your sister-in-law (SIL), Brenda. She said she was moving things for safekeeping. She had a U-Haul truck. Two men helped load everything.”
My ears rang. “When?”
“About two hours ago.”
Two hours. While Mom lay unconscious.
“I was going to call you.”
I walked back to my car in a daze and called Brenda.
“Hello?” she answered.
“Where is Mom’s furniture?”
Silence.
Then she sighed. “Emily, don’t start. I’m protecting the family assets,” she said flatly. “Your mom isn’t coming back. At her age, she won’t survive this. I’m preventing chaos before the vultures circle.”
My hands started shaking. “She’s still alive!”
There was a pause.
“It’s basically over.”
I felt something inside me snap.
“Your mom isn’t coming back.”
“It’s already sold. It’s what I’m owed for tolerating her all these years.”
I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. “Owed? For what? Sunday dinners?”
“For being treated like an outsider,” she shot back. “You and Dave always had your private talks. She never trusted me.”
“Maybe because you’re the same person who just cleared out her house while she’s fighting for her life!”
She hung up.
“It’s already sold.”
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