
My Son Called the Woman Who Killed My Mother "Mom
Chapter 3
The bandage on my forehead was throbbing, a dull, rhythmic reminder of how quickly love could curdle into hatred. I had walked into Remy’s playroom with a trembling peace offering—a promise of double-fudge ice cream, his favorite. I wanted five minutes. Just five minutes to remind my seven-year-old son that I was his mother, not the ghost haunting the guest room.
He didn't even look up from his blocks. "Go away."
"Remy, please," I said, my voice cracking under the strain of forced cheer. "Just a quick trip. Like we used to."
"I said go away!" He spun around, his face twisted in a snarl that didn't belong on a child. "I hate you! You're mean! I want Mama Miriam!"
The name was a physical blow. Before I could breathe, he snatched a heavy, die-cast metal truck from the carpet and hurled it. The impact against my brow was sharp and hot. I staggered back, blood trickling into my eye, blinding me in a red haze.
"Oh, my poor brave soldier." Miriam materialized in the doorway, not to check on my bleeding head, but to scoop Remy into her arms. She glared at me over his shoulder, her eyes void of sympathy. "Look what she made you do. Shh, it’s okay. Look what I bought you."
She produced a sleek, new handheld gaming console from her apron pocket. Remy’s tears vanished instantly. He buried his face in her neck, clutching the bribe, while I stood there, bleeding and erased.
I retreated to the kitchen, clutching a paper towel to my head. The room smelled of garlic and searing meat—a domestic warmth that felt entirely alien. Miriam followed a moment later, humming, picking up a chef’s knife to slice peppers.
"I’m hiring a private investigator," I said, the words tasting like copper and ash. "I don't care what Everett says. I don't care about the autopsy. I will find proof."
Miriam didn’t stop chopping. The rhythm of the blade against the wooden board was steady, hypnotic. *Chop. Chop. Chop.*
"You really are tedious, Eleanora," she said, her tone light, conversational. She paused, turning the knife in the light. "You want to know about the mushrooms? I found them near the rotting stump behind the guest cottage. *Amanita phalloides*. Death Caps. They look remarkably like the Paddy Straws your mother loved so much, don't they?"
The air left the room. My knees locked to keep me upright. "You... you admit it."
"I admit nothing to anyone who matters," she smiled, a slow, predatory curling of lips. "Go ahead. Tell the police. Who do you think they'll believe? The Chief Medical Examiner and his traumatized son, or the hysterical, jealous ex-wife who just frightened her child into violence?"
She stepped closer, the knife point lowered but present. "You’re already dead in this house, Eleanora. We’re just waiting for you to stop moving."
I couldn't breathe. I couldn't stay. I spun on my heel and ran for the living room. The only thing that mattered now was on the mantle. The heavy brass urn. My mother.
My fingers closed around the cold metal, clutching it to my chest like a shield. I turned for the front door, but a shadow blocked the hallway.
Everett.
"Put it back," he said, his voice flat, bored.
"I'm leaving," I gasped, backing away. "I'm taking her with me."
"That urn is property of the estate. And since you're no longer the mistress of this estate..." He lunged, his hand clamping over the brass lid.
I screamed, twisting away, but he was stronger. He wrenched the urn from my grip. "You want her so bad? Let’s see how much."
He strode toward the powder room. I scrambled after him, grabbing at his suit jacket, my fingernails tearing into the fabric. "Everett, no! Please!"
He kicked the bathroom door open and held the urn over the open toilet bowl. The water below swirled, clear and indifferent.
"One flush," he said, his eyes dead behind his wire-rimmed glasses. "And she joins the sewer rats. Where she belongs."
"Don't!" I shrieked, the sound tearing my throat apart. "She paid for your school! She loved you like a son!"
"She was a condescending bitch who thought she owned me," Everett spat. He tilted the urn. A few grey specks of ash drifted down into the water.
I collapsed. My legs gave out, and I hit the tile floor hard, the pain in my knees nothing compared to the agony in my chest. "Stop! I'll do anything!"
"Beg," he commanded, looking down at me with a sneer that terrified me more than his anger. It was a look of absolute power.
I bowed my head, my forehead touching the cold tile, the blood from my wound smearing against the floor. "Please. Please, Everett. Don't hurt her. Please."
"Pathetic." He pulled the urn back, tucking it under his arm. He reached into his jacket pocket and threw a folded document onto the floor in front of my face. A quitclaim deed.
"Sign the house over to me. Sole ownership. You leave tonight. No alimony, no custody battle, nothing. You walk out with the clothes on your back and that jar of ash. Or I flush it right now."
I looked at the document. It was the end of my life. My home. My son.
But looking up at the man holding my mother’s remains hostage, I realized my life had ended the moment the plate shattered on the floor.
I grabbed the pen from his pocket with shaking fingers. I signed my name in blood and ink.
Everett snatched the paper, checking the signature. He set the urn on the floor and stepped over me. "Good choice. Now get out before I change my mind."
I crawled to the urn, cradling it against my heaving chest, and wept.
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