My name is Ruth Dawson. I’m seventy-three years old, widowed, and living alone in a quiet gated community in Naples, Florida, where Christmas comes with palm trees instead of snow and inflatable flamingos wear Santa hats on manicured lawns.
That Christmas Eve, my house smelled like roasted turkey, cinnamon candles, and the pecan pie I bought from the bakery Ray used to love before he died two years earlier. I had spent three exhausting days preparing dinner for my son Eddie and his new wife, Moren—scrubbing already-clean floors, polishing silverware nobody used anymore, and driving across town twice because I forgot the cranberry sauce Eddie adored as a child. I wanted everything perfect because despite the distance growing between us for months, I still believed Christmas might bring my son back to me.
When Eddie arrived, he hugged me tightly enough that for one fragile second I felt hope again. He smelled like his father’s old aftershave, and I almost saw the little boy who used to run through these hallways in Spider-Man pajamas. But then Moren stepped into my house behind him, her eyes scanning my living room like a realtor pricing property. She noticed the granite counters, the pool visible through the sliding doors, the expensive crown molding Ray insisted on before we retired to Florida. And suddenly that warm feeling disappeared.
After dinner, we exchanged gifts beside the glowing tree. I handed Eddie a small box containing the key fob to a three-year-old BMW I had secretly bought for him because his truck kept breaking down. His eyes filled with tears as he hugged me, whispering, “Mom, you didn’t have to do this.” Then I gave Moren a designer handbag I had carefully wrapped in tissue paper. She glanced at it, snapped a quick selfie for social media, tossed it onto the couch, and said only one word. “Cute.”
Then Eddie cleared his throat and avoided my eyes. “Mom… we didn’t get you anything this year.” My stomach tightened as Moren leaned back smiling smugly. “I told Eddie it was time you learned how to give without expecting anything back,” she said smoothly. “True generosity means not needing reciprocation.” The room suddenly felt cold despite the Christmas lights glowing around us. I looked at my son sitting beside the woman humiliating me in my own home—and quietly reached for the drawer beside my chair where a thick manila envelope had been waiting all evening- READ NEXT PART-