I looked at the screen long enough for the ringing to feel almost visible, then answered.
“Hi,” I said.
He was quiet for a second, maybe surprised that I had picked up.
“Hi, Mom. I didn’t know if you were still in town.”
“I’m in Savannah for a little while.”
“Oh.”
A small silence opened.
“How’s your hip?” he asked.
“Better. Walking more.”
“That’s good.”
Another pause.
There was a time when I would have rushed in to close a silence like that, filling it with weather, grandchildren, recipes, anything to keep discomfort from hardening. This time I let it stay. Not as punishment. As honesty. If a conversation has nothing to stand on, it deserves to feel its own emptiness for a minute.
Finally he said, “The kids ask about you.”
“I miss them.”
“I know.”
He sounded tired. Not theatrical, not manipulative. Just tired in the ordinary human way people are when life keeps presenting them with the bill for habits they assumed someone else would cover. For a brief second I saw him not as the boy I had raised or the man who had disappointed me, but as someone in the messy middle of his own unfinished becoming. That did not excuse him. It did soften the edge of my anger enough for me to speak plainly.