My Brother Stole Mom’s Cancer Medicine, Then She Gave Him One Envelope-olive

For weeks, my mother learned to suffer quietly.

That was the first thing my brother stole from her.

Not the medicine.

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Not the sleep.

The quiet.

She had stage four cancer, and by the time I moved back into the house, the living room had already started becoming a place people whispered in.

There was a hospital bed near the window.

There were paper cups on the side table.

There were pill charts taped inside a cabinet and a bell Mom refused to ring unless she truly had no choice.

She had always been like that.

If a tire went flat, she called a tow truck for everyone else before she admitted her own car was smoking.

If she was sick, she made soup for somebody else.

So when I found her curled on the edge of the bed with one fist pressed into her side, I knew she had passed the line where pride could hold her up.

“Do you want me to call the doctor?” I asked.

She shook her head too quickly.

“I’m fine, Casey.”

Fine had become her favorite lie.

I checked the pouch under her pillow after she fell asleep.

The pain patches were not where they were supposed to be.

Three were missing.

At first I blamed the schedule.

Then I blamed exhaustion.

Then I blamed myself, because blaming my brother felt too ugly to hold.

Jason came by every other day with flowers from the grocery store and a face full of grief.

He kissed Mom’s forehead slowly.

He squeezed her hand.

He told relatives on the phone that he was spending every possible minute with her.

But I saw how he sweated after twenty minutes in the house.

I saw how his eyes kept sliding toward her pillow.

I started marking the corner of each package with a tiny blue dot.

I checked them before his visits.

I checked them after.

The dots disappeared with him.

The worst part was that Mom knew.

She began hiding the patches in places no dying woman should have to think about.

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