My dad raised me alone after my mom left me-uyenphan

She said it like someone holding on to the last thread of control, her voice trembling under the weight of something I couldn’t see yet but would soon understand far too clearly.

“Can you… can you drive me home, please?”

Rain blurred the parking lot into streaks of light and shadow, and for a moment, the world felt smaller, quieter, like everything had narrowed down to just her voice.

I should have said yes.

Immediately.

Without thinking.

That’s what people do when someone asks for help like that.

But instead, I asked the one question that revealed more about me than I was ready to admit.

“So… where do I sleep?”

The words hung there between us, heavier than the storm, sharper than the cold air cutting through my shirt.

And the look on her face changed.

Not dramatically.

Just enough.

Enough to tell me that something inside her had shifted.

Because in that moment, she understood something I had been hiding even from myself.

I wasn’t just helping her.

I was surviving too.

Three weeks.

That’s how long I had been living out of my car.

Three weeks of pretending everything was fine.

Three weeks of parking in different places every night so no one would notice.

Three weeks of answering texts with “I’m busy” instead of “I have nowhere to go.”

You learn things when your life collapses quietly.

You learn how to minimize.

How to explain less.

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