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My Mother Paid Me to Leave Him Novel Cover

My Mother Paid Me to Leave Him

The invitation arrived on heavy cream cardstock, embossed with gold lettering that caught the afternoon light streaming through my apartment window. Lucille Greene cordially invites you to celebrate her marriage to Frederick Carroll. I traced the gold letters with my fingertip, feeling nothing but the hollow obligation that had defined our relationship for as long as I could remember. Four years since I'd last seen Spencer, and now I was about to walk into his family's world—wearing a dress I'd borrowed from Nylah because I couldn't justify buying something new for a mother who'd abandoned me when I needed her most. The rooftop venue of The Celestial was draped in white peonies and crystal chandeliers that refracted Manhattan's skyline into a thousand glittering points. I arrived alone, clutching a small gift bag that felt inadequate in this ocean of wealth. The maître d' led me through tables of people whose jewelry could have paid off my medical school loans, and I felt the familiar tightness in my chest—the one that came whenever I remembered how far I was from the world I'd once shared with Spencer. I was halfway to my assigned seat when I turned, and there he was. Spencer Carroll stood at the head table beside a man I assumed was Frederick, his father. He wore a tailored charcoal suit that emphasized the broad shoulders and lean build that had filled out since college.
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Chapter 5

The elevator chimed.

I heard it from across the room — that soft, familiar tone — and something in my chest went cold before my brain caught up with why.

The doors opened.

Lucille stepped out first. She was wearing her camel coat, the one she saved for occasions she wanted to look effortless. Frederick was a half-step behind her, one hand in his pocket, his face carrying the particular blankness of a man who has already decided what he thinks.

They saw us.

I don't know exactly what they saw. I know what it looked like. Spencer on the couch, his jacket gone, his shirt untucked. Me beside him, my dress wrinkled, my hair loose. The blanket half-pulled. The water glass on the coffee table.

Lucille's face moved through something fast — surprise, then calculation, then something that looked almost like relief, like she'd been waiting for exactly this.

She crossed the room in four steps and hit me.

The sound was sharp and flat, like a door slamming. My head turned with it. My cheek went hot immediately, that deep, spreading heat that takes a second to register as pain.

No one spoke.

Spencer was on his feet. I don't remember him standing — he was just suddenly there, between me and Lucille, his hand on her arm, his voice low and controlled in a way that meant the opposite of calm.

'Don't,' he said.

Lucille's chin lifted. 'She is your sister —'

'She is not my sister.'

'By law —'

'Don't.' The word again, quieter this time. More dangerous.

Frederick hadn't moved from the elevator threshold. He stood there with his hands in his pockets and watched, and said absolutely nothing, and somehow that was worse than anything else in the room. His silence wasn't shock. It was assessment. He was watching to see how it resolved, the way he watched everything — as a problem being sorted.

I pressed two fingers to my cheek. The skin was hot and tight.

I picked up my bag from the floor beside the couch. I found my shoes. I put them on, one and then the other, and I did not look at Spencer because if I looked at him I would not be able to leave, and I needed to leave.

'Camilla.' His voice.

'I'm fine,' I said.

I walked past Lucille. Past Frederick. Into the elevator. I pressed the button for my floor and I stood with my back straight and my bag over my shoulder and I watched the doors close on all four of them — Lucille's flushed face, Frederick's careful blankness, and Spencer, who was still standing in the middle of his living room looking at me like I was something he was about to lose again and didn't know how to stop.

The doors closed.

I breathed.

---

She found me the next morning.

I was two blocks from the hospital, already in my coat, already running the day's schedule in my head, when my phone buzzed with her name. I almost didn't answer. Then I thought about what it would mean to let it go to voicemail, and I picked up.

'Coffee,' Lucille said. 'There's a place on Reade Street. Fifteen minutes.'

Not a question.

I went.

She was already seated when I arrived, at a corner table, her coat draped over the back of her chair. She had ordered for both of us — two lattes, mine with oat milk, which meant she'd asked someone or guessed or simply decided. A small performance of knowing me.

She looked rested. Composed. Like last night had been a minor inconvenience she'd already filed away.

'Sit down, Camilla.'

I sat.

She wrapped both hands around her cup and looked at me with the expression she used when she wanted to seem reasonable. Warm, almost. The expression that had fooled me exactly once, when I was fourteen and she'd come back for three weeks and I'd believed it meant something.

'I want you to understand,' she said, 'that I'm not angry with you.'

I didn't say anything.

'What happened last night —' She paused, tilted her head slightly. 'It can't continue. You know that. Spencer is your stepbrother. Frederick is my husband. There is a family here, a real one, and what you're doing threatens all of it.' She said it gently, like she was explaining something to someone who simply hadn't thought it through.

She reached into her bag.

The check was crisp. She set it on the table and slid it toward me with two fingers, the way you'd slide a document across a conference table. Professional. Considered.

I looked at the number.

It was large enough to be an insult dressed as a gift.

'I know things have been difficult,' she said. 'The residency, the debt your father left —' A small pause, just long enough to let that land. 'This could give you a real start somewhere else. A different city. A fellowship abroad, even. You're talented, Camilla. You don't need this complication.'

She said it like she was doing me a favor. Like she was the one person in the room who could see clearly.

I looked at the check.

I thought about my father. Martin Greene, who had lain in a hospital bed for months and never once called me to say how bad it was. Who had sold things quietly, borrowed against everything he had, and died in a room I didn't know he was in because he had decided, in his particular way of loving me, that the most loving thing he could do was disappear from my life before he became a burden.

I had learned that from him. That love meant making yourself smaller. That the kindest thing you could do for someone was remove yourself from the equation before they had to ask you to.

I had done it at twenty-two. I had packed that lesson up and carried it across four years and one very bad breakup and a residency that nearly broke me, and I had called it strength.

I picked up the check.

Lucille's expression shifted — just slightly, just enough. Relief, moving in under the warmth.

I tore it in half.

Then I tore it again.

I set the four pieces on the table between us and looked at my mother — really looked at her, maybe for the first time in years — and I felt something settle in my chest. Not anger. Something quieter than anger. Something that had been waiting a long time to be said out loud.

'I'm not doing this anymore,' I said. My voice was even. 'Not the check. Not the conversations where you tell me what's appropriate. Not the version of myself that disappears when you need the room cleared.'

Lucille opened her mouth.

'I'm not finished.' I wasn't loud. I didn't need to be. 'You left when I was sixteen. You came back when it suited you and left again when it didn't, and I spent a long time thinking that was something I had to earn my way out of. That if I was good enough, or quiet enough, or useful enough, eventually you'd —' I stopped. Breathed. 'It doesn't matter. I'm done waiting for that.'

'Camilla, I am your mother —'

'You're a woman I share DNA with,' I said. 'That's not the same thing. You stopped being my mother a long time ago. I think we both know that.'

The café moved around us — the hiss of the espresso machine, someone laughing near the door, the ordinary noise of a morning that didn't know or care what was happening at this corner table.

Lucille sat very still. Her composure was intact. It would stay intact; she was too practiced for it not to. But something behind her eyes had shifted — a small, cold recognition.

I stood. I buttoned my coat.

'Don't call me again,' I said. 'Not about Spencer. Not about Frederick. Not about any of it.'

I left her sitting there with the pieces of her check and her untouched latte and the particular silence of a woman who has just discovered that the person she expected to fold has, finally, stopped folding.

Outside, the November air hit my face — both cheeks, the one that still ached faintly and the one that didn't.

I walked toward the hospital. I didn't look back.

For the first time in a very long time, I didn't feel like I was disappearing.

I felt like I was arriving.

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