“It was my fault. I was obsessed with earning more, thinking money would keep everything stable. I didn’t see how alone he felt. I was so determined to be strong that I made him feel unnecessary.”
Those words hit me hard. For years, I’d believed she chose her career over us. I never imagined fear was hiding behind her strength.
“I’m scared,” she continued. “Afraid that if I don’t prove I can carry everything, one day he’ll leave because he thinks he’s a burden.”
My mother was silent for a long moment.
“A marriage isn’t only about money,” she finally said. “It’s about standing together when life gets hard.”
I returned to my room but didn’t sleep. Memories surfaced—hospital nights alone, meals eaten cold, conversations I wanted to have but never did. We hadn’t stopped loving each other. We just didn’t know how to ask for help.
At dawn, I woke Meera. Half-asleep, she asked why.
“I’m taking you somewhere,” I said.
“Where?” she murmured.
“To the marriage registration office,” I replied, surprising even myself.
She stared at me, eyes filling with tears, then nodded.