So I did, slowly, one class at a time.
Lily and Mae grew up in that small, raggedy apartment, then another, then something a little better after I got steady work doing administrative support for a small firm.
It wasn’t easy.
But for a while, that felt like enough.
I tried to pay her.
***
Twenty-seven years passed. I am 44 now. My girls have grown.
Two years ago, somehow, life found a way to pull me under.
***
Mae got seriously ill when she was 25. It started small. Then it wasn’t.
Doctor visits turned into procedures. Procedures turned into bills that didn’t stop.
I worked longer hours, picked up extra jobs, and cut back on everything.
But it still wasn’t enough.
I was drowning again.
Life found a way to pull me under.
***
That morning, I sat at my desk, staring at another overdue notice, trying to figure out what I could delay.
That’s when the door opened.
A man in a charcoal suit stepped inside and walked toward my cubicle.
“Are you Nora?” he asked when he stopped beside me.
“Yes,” I responded skeptically.
He stepped forward and placed a small, worn box on my desk.
“My name is Carter,” he said. “I represent the estate of Arthur.”
“Are you Nora?”
The name struck me instantly. The man I’d met for 30 seconds in 1998. I’d never forgotten him and had always wondered what happened to him. I never saw him again.