The thin, cheap curtains in the Phoenix airport hotel room barely softened the harsh orange glare pouring in from the streetlights outside.
The digital clock on the nightstand read 12:45 AM.
I sat frozen on the edge of the stiff mattress, the silence pressing against my ears until it felt almost physical. My hands were shaking so badly I nearly dropped my phone. I pressed it harder to my ear, listening to the flat, lifeless buzz of the disconnected call.
My mother had just hung up on me.
Ten minutes earlier, I had been asleep, drained after fourteen brutal hours of client meetings and presentations. I was a single mother, a regional sales director, and this trip to Phoenix was supposed to be the opportunity that changed everything—the promotion that might finally let me move Noah into a better school district.
I hadn’t wanted to leave him.
But my mother, Margaret, had offered to watch him for the three days I was gone. She lived forty minutes from my apartment in Milwaukee.
“It takes a village, Claire,” she had said, in that sugary, superior tone she used whenever she wanted to look generous. “Your sister Brooke is staying with me this week. We’ll have a lovely time with our grandson. Go earn that paycheck.”
I had kissed Noah’s soft cheek at the airport, promising him a new Lego set when I got home. He had hugged me tightly, smelling like strawberry shampoo and childhood innocence.
Then the phone rang.