Years later, when my mother became seriously ill, our world narrowed. The holidays came and went more quietly. When she was no longer with us, the idea of Christmas Eve felt heavy. I considered skipping it altogether.
But her voice stayed with me. That calm certainty. “It is for someone who needs it.”
So I cooked.
I followed her recipes as best I could. The kitchen felt too quiet without her. I wrapped the cornbread in foil, just as she always had, and carried the plate down the street alone.
When I reached the laundromat, I hesitated. I was not sure what I expected to find. Eli had always been there before. Part of me feared the space would be empty.
He was there. But he was not the man I remembered.
A Moment That Stopped Me Cold
Eli stood near the entrance, taller than I remembered, wearing a pressed suit. In his hands, he held a small bundle of white lilies.
For a moment, neither of us spoke.
Then he said my name.
He told me he had come to honor my mother. He said she had changed his life in ways I never knew.
We sat together, and he shared something she had never told me.
Years earlier, at a crowded county fair, I had wandered away as a child. In the confusion, I nearly stepped into harm’s way. Eli had seen it happen. He had pulled me back before I even realized the danger.
My mother never mentioned it to me. What she did was quietly stay in his life afterward. She supported him in ways I never saw. Encouraging him. Helping him believe he deserved stability, even when he did not trust it.
The suit he wore that night was his. The confidence was his too.
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