That is Maria.
She notices everything.
A few weeks ago, we were at the supermarket on a Saturday afternoon. Completely normal trip. I needed detergent, pasta, and coffee. Maria wanted some cereal she described as “emotionally necessary.”
Then Maria tugged my sleeve.
We were near the entrance when we heard a man yelling.
He was standing beside a broken jar on the floor, barking at a cashier who looked about nineteen.
“This is your fault,” he said. “Who puts glass there? Are all of you incompetent?”
I almost kept walking.
Then Maria tugged my sleeve.
“Mom, why is that man yelling at her?”
Then he saw me.
I looked up.
And my body went back in time before my brain caught up.
It was Michael.
Older, heavier, thinner on top, anger worn into his face. Life had clearly not been gentle with him, but the old arrogance was still there. Cruel men carry that kind of confidence for years. They assume nobody will challenge them.
Then he saw me.
Michael noticed.
His eyes narrowed. He looked at Maria. Then he smiled.
Same smug smile. Same ugly little twist in it.
“Well,” he said, walking toward us, “if it isn’t Sharon.”
I grabbed Maria’s hand without thinking.
Michael noticed.
“And this must be your daughter,” he said.
Then Maria stepped in front of me.
Your daughter.
Not ours.
I should have walked away. I know that. But I was frozen.
He shrugged. “For what it’s worth, I still don’t regret leaving.”
The old shame hit me so fast it made me dizzy. Not because I believed him. Because some wounds remember first.
Maria looked from me to him, and suddenly the pieces clicked in her brain. Then she stepped in front of me.
A few people nearby went quiet.
She looked him straight in the eye and said, “You shouldn’t talk to my mom like that.”
A few people nearby went quiet.
See more on the next page