It had been a dream, living in her sprawling, slightly-too-big house. My partner and I had moved in after college, just for a year, to save up. That year turned into three. She was like a second mother, an aunt figure who’d always been there, always offering a warm meal and an even warmer hug. We were comfortable, maybe too comfortable. But we had plans, big plans, for a future we’d build ourselves. Or so I thought.
Then came the little blue line. Two of them. My heart hammered against my ribs, a chaotic drum solo of pure joy and absolute terror. We were going to be parents. I hugged the toilet for the next few weeks, a constant companion to my morning sickness, but beneath the nausea was an exhilarating tremor. This was it. Our lives were about to change forever.
We picked a Saturday morning, bright and sunny, the kind of day that felt perfect for life-altering news. She was in the kitchen, making her famous sourdough. The smell always made the house feel like home. My partner wrapped an arm around me, squeezing my hand. I took a deep breath.

A framed photo of an older woman | Source: The Celebritist
“We have something to tell you,” I started, my voice a little shaky, but full of brimming excitement. I held up the ultrasound picture, a blurry little bean. “We’re pregnant.”
I watched her face, waiting for the wide smile, the surprised gasp, the immediate hug I knew would come. Instead, her hands froze mid-knead. Her eyes, usually so kind and crinkled at the corners, went flat. Her mouth, which had been smiling only moments before, tightened into a thin, unreadable line.
“Oh,” she said. Just that. “Oh.”
My partner and I exchanged a confused glance. Was she… upset?
Then she turned from the counter, wiping her floured hands on her apron. Her voice was calm, unnervingly so. “You need to move out.”
The words hung in the air, heavier than any flour dust. My breath hitched. I felt the blood drain from my face. “What?” I whispered, utterly bewildered.

A close-up of a pensive man | Source: Midjourney
“You heard me,” she said, her gaze unwavering. “This house isn’t big enough for a baby. It’s time for you to find your own place. You have two months.”
My partner stepped forward, his face a mask of disbelief. “What are you talking about? We just told you—”
“I know what you told me,” she interrupted, her voice gaining a sharp edge I’d never heard before. “And my answer is, it’s time for you to go.”
I felt a hot flush of shame and hurt wash over me. My eyes burned. After all these years? After everything? She’s kicking us out because we’re having a baby? It felt like a punch to the gut, a betrayal so profound it left me breathless. I stumbled out of the kitchen, unable to meet her gaze, the joyful flutter in my stomach replaced by a cold knot of dread.
The next few weeks were a blur of frantic apartment hunting and whispered arguments. Every listing we saw felt too small, too expensive, too far away. My morning sickness worsened with the stress. We were living under a cloud of unspoken tension. She was polite, distant. The sourdough was still made, but the warmth was gone. Her absence was more painful than any argument. My partner tried to talk to her, to understand, but she simply repeated, “It’s time. You need your own space.”

A man driving a bus | Source: Midjourney
“She’s just being practical,” my partner would say, trying to reassure me, but his eyes held the same hurt and confusion as mine. “She wants us to be independent.”
But it didn’t feel practical. It felt like punishment. Every creak of the floorboards, every quiet moment, felt like a judgment. I found myself resenting her, this woman who had once been so loving, for ripping our world apart just when it was supposed to be coming together.
I started noticing other things. She was losing weight, her clothes hanging looser than before. Her hands, which once kneaded dough with such strength, trembled when she held her teacup. Her energy was gone. She went to bed earlier, woke later. I saw her wince sometimes, when she thought no one was looking. Guilt pricked at me, but the anger still overshadowed it. She was pushing us away, and it hurt.
Two months flew by in a haze of packing boxes and exhaustion. We found a tiny, rundown apartment on the other side of town, but it was ours. We were leaving the following weekend. The night before our official move-out date, she called us into the living room. The room felt cold, stark, devoid of the usual comfort.
She sat in her armchair, looking smaller than I’d ever seen her. Her face was pale, her lips almost blue. She motioned for us to sit.

An older woman getting off a bus | Source: Midjourney
“I have something else to tell you,” she said, her voice barely a whisper. She coughed, a dry, rattling sound that made me flinch. “I’ve been sick for a while now.”
My partner and I exchanged a worried glance. Sick? How sick?
She reached into her pocket and pulled out a crinkled envelope, holding it out to me. My hand trembled as I took it. It was thick, heavy. Inside, nestled among official-looking documents, was a letter written in her familiar, elegant script. And a key. A very familiar key.
“I have Stage 4 pancreatic cancer,” she said, the words barely audible. “And I don’t have long.”
The air left my lungs in a whoosh. MY GOD. My vision swam. All the anger, all the resentment, shattered into a million pieces.
“The day you told me about the baby,” she continued, her eyes fixed on mine, “I knew I had to act fast. I didn’t want you to see me like this. I wanted you to have a fresh start, without my illness hanging over you.” She gestured weakly to the envelope. “That’s the deed to this house. It’s yours now. All of it.”

A frowning man talking on the phone | Source: Midjourney
I stared at her, then down at the papers in my hand. The address was unmistakably hers. Our address. The key, glinting in the faint lamplight, was the spare key to her front door. OUR front door.
“I told you to move out because I needed to finalize the transfer,” she explained, a tear tracing a path down her papery cheek. “And because I couldn’t bear to tell you then. You were so happy. I couldn’t overshadow your joy with my death sentence. I needed you to find your own place, to prove you could do it, before I gave you ours. I needed to know my grandchild would have a secure home.”
A profound, wrenching sob tore through me. She hadn’t been angry. She hadn’t been cruel. She had been dying, alone, and she had used her last ounce of strength, her last act of love, to secure our future. She’d pushed us away, not out of malice, but out of a desperate, heartbreaking desire to give us everything she could, even if it meant taking on the burden of our hurt and misunderstanding.

A man wearing a blue cap | Source: Midjourney
“I wanted the baby to grow up here,” she whispered, her voice fading. “To know this home. To know peace.”
I fell to my knees beside her chair, burying my face in her lap, tears streaming down my face. MY GOD. My poor, beautiful, selfless angel. My heart was breaking, not just for her, but for all the precious moments I’d wasted on anger, all the resentment I’d harbored. She was giving us the greatest gift, and all this time, I thought she was abandoning us. The surprise wasn’t that she kicked us out, but that in her final act, she gave us everything. And she did it with a broken heart, so ours wouldn’t have to be.
