When my 19-year-old son texted me, “I am so sorry, Mom,” and then turned off his phone, I told myself not to panic. He was in college. He was grown. But 10 minutes later, an unknown number called, and before that conversation was over, I was already reaching for my keys with tears in my eyes.
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Tom had always been the kind of boy who noticed the cost of things. Not just money. He noticed the effort, time, and what people gave up, even when they thought they were hiding it well.
When he was little, I’d offer to stop for pizza on a Friday, and he’d say, “We’ve got food at home, Mom. We’re good.”
I told myself that meant I’d raised a thoughtful son. I didn’t realize how much of his thoughtfulness was really guilt wearing good manners.
Tom had always been the kind of boy who noticed the cost of things.
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His father left when Tom was five, acting like he wasn’t tearing up a family so much as rearranging his own comfort. He said the woman from work was “just a colleague” right up until she wasn’t.
And after a while, I stopped expecting apologies from grown men and started pouring everything I had into the one person who had stayed.
My son.
Tom never asked for much. That was part of the problem.
When he was 14 and needed a new laptop, he started by saying his old one “still sort of worked” before admitting the screen flashed black every 20 minutes. When he got into college, he apologized before he celebrated. He never fully believed he could be somebody’s joy without also being their burden.
His father left when Tom was five.
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I thought college had helped with that. Tom called often, texted pictures of cafeteria food that looked like punishment, and sent updates about professors he liked.
He sounded lighter there. But the message he sent me that afternoon hit before my mind could catch up.
Just one message. No context. No follow-up. Just:
“I am so sorry, Mom.”
Tom had never apologized without telling me why, not when he broke a window at 12, not when he failed a chemistry exam. Those five words didn’t sit right with me, no matter how I tried to brush them off.
I called Tom. Straight to voicemail. Again. Then his phone was off.
The message he sent me that afternoon hit before my mind could catch up.
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I told myself not to panic. Maybe his phone had lost charge. Maybe he’d gone into class.
And still, something older and sharper kept telling me I knew my son too well for this to be nothing.
I typed a message and deleted it three times before sending: “Call me right now.”
Ten minutes later, my phone rang. Unknown number.
“Hello, are you Tom’s mother?”
My grip tightened. “Yes. What happened?”
A pause, the kind that tells you the person on the other end wishes they weren’t holding this piece of someone else’s life.
Maybe his phone had lost charge.
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“Ma’am, I’m calling from your son’s college,” a man replied. “He left something for you.”
“Left something? What do you mean?”
“Tom asked me to call you today and make sure you got it,” he said. “He said it was important.”
Panic seized me. “Where is my son?”
“He didn’t say,” the man admitted. “He just left a box.”
I was already standing. If this were something simple, Tom would have called me himself.
I grabbed my keys and headed out before I could second-guess it.
“He just left a box.”
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***
The campus looked insultingly normal. Students crossed the quad with coffee cups, laughing at things that had nothing to do with my anxiety. I parked badly and hurried toward the building.
A young guy was waiting outside, a skinny college kid in a gray hoodie. Tom had planned this carefully enough to make it look calm from the outside.
“You’re Tom’s mom?” he asked the moment I approached.
“Where is he?” I asked.
“I don’t know. He just asked me to do this. I didn’t really want to get involved, but he seemed serious.” He held out a box. “He gave me your number and said I had to make sure you got this today.”
“Where is he?”
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