The court hearing was quiet.
Clean. I wore my mom’s silver earrings and black blouse and sat next to Grandma Elaine, my hands clasped tightly in my lap.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t plead.
I just let the truth do what I couldn’t do.
The judge ruled three weeks before my 18th birthday. Richard was ordered to repay every cent, plus interest, into an account solely under my name. The court froze all remaining accounts and removed him as the guardian of Ethan’s fund.
Aunt Theresa took over for both of us.
The gavel hit the wood, and I felt something inside me exhale for the first time in years.
I enrolled at my dream college.
My acceptance letter sits framed on my desk, next to a photo of Mom on the porch, the sun catching the curve of her cheek, a smoothie in her hand.
I kept our recipe list, now laminated, on my mini-fridge. It’s creased in the corners, turmeric-stained, and perfect.
I still make the blueberry one when I miss her the most.
Two nights before I left for college, Aunt Theresa invited me over for dinner. Her house always smelled like thyme and baked bread.
It was the kind of place that softened your shoulders the moment you walked in.
She made spaghetti and set the table with cloth napkins, even though it was just the two of us.
As we finished eating, she reached for my hand.
“I should’ve fought harder,” she said softly. “I knew Richard wasn’t right to take you both in. I was scared I wouldn’t be enough…
but that was no excuse.”
I didn’t know what to say. So I just held her hand.
“I’m here now,” she added. “You will always have a room in this house.
No matter what happens.”
I looked around the room, at the worn quilt on the couch, the candle flickering in the corner, and felt something shift in my chest.
“I’m thinking of asking Gran to move in with me,” she said. “This house is too quiet anyway. And we both miss your mother in silence.
We’d keep each other company and I think we should mourn together.”
“She’d like that,” I nodded. “I think she’s going to keep you closer now that it’s just the two of you.”
“And you, Leila, during semester breaks. I mean, Ethan is welcome, too.
If he ever wants to come… home.”
Ethan called after the judgment. I almost didn’t take his call.
“I didn’t know,” he said quickly.
“I swear, Leila, I didn’t know what he was doing.”
“I believe you,” I said, but I wasn’t convinced.
“We had to cancel my karate classes. Dad’s broke. The rent is overdue, and Marla is fed up with him.”
“I’m sorry, E,” I said.
And I meant it.
“Do you hate me, Lei?” he asked quietly.
“No, not at all. But I can’t come back. Do you understand?”
“I get it,” he said.
I wanted to say more.
That I missed racing him to the back fence. That I missed our movie nights in the living room with extra buttery popcorn. I wanted to tell him that I loved him.
But some truths are too fragile to hold over the phone.
My father called, too.
Many times. I never answered. His final voicemail came a week before my fall semester.
“You think this is justice?” he snapped.
“You’re just like Melanie. Your mother always played the victim. She always had this need to be right.
Apples and trees, huh? Well, Leila, go live your life.”
I deleted it.
He never understood it. It was never about revenge.
It was about my mother, who stayed up at night making chocolate and collagen brownies and researching college scholarships while her body betrayed her.
It was about the way she held my hand before a school ballet recital, even when her fingers ached.
It was about the promise she made.
“You will go further than I ever could, my Leila-girl. I promise,” she’d said.
My mother didn’t raise me to scream and complain. She raised me to stand tall.
And sometimes, late at night, I think about the last time she touched my face. Her hands were cold, but her voice was warm.
“You are allowed to take up space,” she whispered. “Even when people make you feel small.”
Now I understand.
And I took up space; in court, in college, and in the life she left me.
And when Richard’s name lights up my screen? I let it go straight to voicemail.







