She was seventy-eight years old.
I watched as she crossed the room, gently pulled back the covers, and lay down beside my sleeping daughter as if it were the most natural thing in the world.
Emily shifted, nudged toward the edge of the mattress. She frowned slightly in her sleep, then settled again.
And I stood there in the dark, tears streaming down my face in complete silence.
Margaret had been a widow for most of her life. She lost her husband when Daniel was just a boy and never remarried. She worked endlessly to raise him on her own, taking whatever jobs she could find. Cleaning. Laundry. Early morning food stalls.
Daniel once told me that there were days she barely ate so he could have proper meals. Even after he left for college, she mailed him small amounts of money, folded carefully, as if it were all she had to give.
She lived simply. Quietly. Without complaint.
In recent years, though, we had noticed changes.
She would forget where she was. She once became lost on a familiar street and was found hours later, frightened and confused. Occasionally, she called me by the wrong name. Once, she looked at Daniel and asked who he was.
Doctors spoke gently about memory decline. About confusion that might come and go. We adjusted where we could. We never imagined nighttime wandering.
And we never imagined that her confusion would lead her to the bed of her granddaughter.
The next morning, I showed Daniel the footage.
He didn’t speak at first. He just watched, shoulders slumping, eyes filling with tears.
“She must remember when I was little,” he whispered. “When she used to crawl into bed with me because she was afraid to sleep alone.”
He covered his face with his hands.
“I’ve been so focused on work,” he said. “I didn’t see how much she was slipping.”
That night, Emily slept in our room.
Margaret wasn’t scolded. She wasn’t confronted harshly. She didn’t understand what she had done in the way we did.
What she needed wasn’t blame.
It was comfort.
