Standing on that sidewalk, surrounded by passing traffic and strangers, Nora realized this wasn’t a family argument anymore.
It was a boundary.
Her mother began crying again, softer this time. “Where are we supposed to go?”
Nora reached into her bag and handed over another envelope.
An updated motel booking. A list of housing options. Appointment details from the adviser.
She had prepared it during lunch.
Ronald stared at the papers like they were an insult.
“It would have been easier to just let us stay,” he muttered.
“For you,” Nora replied.
They had no response.
In the weeks that followed, things didn’t resolve overnight. There were angry messages, accusations from relatives who only knew half the story, and one stunning voicemail from an aunt claiming Nora owed her parents comfort because “they sacrificed for their children.”
Nora almost called back.
Then she remembered how often “their children” really meant Lily—and how she had always been expected to manage on her own.
So she stopped explaining herself to people determined not to understand.
Eventually, reality did what emotion could not.
Her parents moved into a small senior apartment complex twenty minutes from Lily’s bakery and forty from Nora’s studio. Lily visited twice that first month—then less. Ronald found part-time bookkeeping work. Denise joined a knitting group and, surprisingly, sounded less bitter when they occasionally spoke.
Distance, it turned out, was healthier than sacrifice.
The first real conversation Nora had with her mother came four months later over coffee in a diner.
Denise stirred her drink and said, without looking up, “I didn’t think you would really leave.”
“I know,” Nora said.