After Her House Burned Down, Her Daughter Asked One Cruel Question-eirian

Carol Peterson had always believed that a mother’s love was supposed to outlast exhaustion.

She believed it when she was twenty-nine and her husband walked out with two shirts, one suitcase, and no intention of sending child support unless someone forced him.

She believed it when Jessica was five years old and sleeping under a faded pink blanket while Carol stood over a motel bathroom sink, rinsing bleach out of the cracks in her hands after a cleaning shift that ended at midnight.

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She believed it when the landlord raised rent, when the car broke down, when the school sent home notices about fees, lunches, field trips, and supplies.

There was always another bill.

There was always another reason to keep going.

Carol learned early that survival did not arrive in one heroic gesture, but in small humiliations endured quietly enough that no one called them sacrifice.

She cleaned houses where women younger than her complained about dust on baseboards while Carol wondered whether Jessica needed new sneakers.

She scrubbed office toilets after executives went home and left coffee rings on glass desks.

She carried trash bags down service stairs, washed strangers’ bathtubs, polished chrome faucets until they reflected a face she barely recognized, and went home with knees that cracked when she climbed the porch steps.

Still, Jessica would run to her.

Jessica would throw both arms around Carol’s waist and press her cheek against Carol’s apron.

“You’re my hero, Mommy,” she would whisper, as if the whole world had been settled by that sentence.

Carol kept those words inside her like a private certificate.

She never had a diploma framed on a wall.

She never had a retirement account worth bragging about.

She had a daughter who once believed she hung the moon.

When Jessica was six, she drew a picture of Carol in purple, yellow, and green crayon.

Carol was wearing a flowered dress in the drawing, though in real life she mostly wore uniforms, thrift-store cardigans, and shoes chosen for how long she could stand in them.

The crayon Carol stood under a yellow sun, holding the tiny stick-figure hand of a smiling little girl.

MOMMY was written across the top in purple letters that slanted like they were dancing.

Carol framed that picture in a cheap black frame and set it in her kitchen.

For nearly thirty years, the drawing followed her through rented rooms, one duplex, and finally the small house she bought late in life because she wanted one thing in the world to be hers.

It hung near the kettle, where she could see it every morning.

The glass was scratched.

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