Her Son Claimed He Sent $7,000 A Month. His Wife Went Pale-eirian

The first thing Hillary Bell noticed was the smell of pine.

Not the thin, dusty pine scent from the little grocery-store wreath she bought every December and hung on the outside of her apartment door with a bent brass hook.

This was sharper.

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Richer.

The kind of pine that did not smell like a tree so much as an entire forest polished, imported, and arranged beneath crystal light.

Marcus’s mansion had always made Hillary feel as if she had entered someone else’s idea of life.

The great room was larger than the church basement where she used to take him for free pancake breakfasts when he was eight.

The ceiling climbed high above her head.

The chandelier looked heavy enough to crush a small car.

The marble floor was so clean she could see the blurred shape of her own navy dress in it.

She had bought that dress at TJ Maxx three winters earlier.

It was a good dress, or at least it had been before too many Christmases, too many careful hand-washings, and too many evenings spent sitting at her kitchen table repairing other people’s clothes for extra cash.

She had pressed it twice before coming.

Still, under the chandelier, she could see the little place near the hem where the fabric had started to shine from age.

She held her old black clutch with both hands.

The clasp pressed into her palm.

That small pain helped.

It gave her something honest to feel.

Maria opened the door before Hillary could ring twice.

“Mrs. Bell,” she whispered, smiling in a way that seemed too gentle for that house. “You look beautiful.”

“You’re sweet to lie,” Hillary said.

Maria squeezed her hand.

That was another honest thing.

A squeeze.

A human one.

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