Then I found him in the east corridor, calm and relaxed, drinking punch like nothing had happened.
When I asked what he had done, he did not deny it.
He said he had done exactly what he wanted.
He told me Ella had ignored him for years, and now everyone knew she could be bought.
That was when I finally understood.
My quiet, wounded son had not been helpless.
He had been waiting for a chance to hurt someone.
PART 3: Choosing the Truth
Ella’s mother arrived furious and heartbroken.
She asked if I was the woman who had paid her daughter.
Jeremiah stepped beside me and whispered for me to call it a misunderstanding.
For years, I had protected him. Excused him. Believed every painful story because guilt made me easy to control.
But not that night.
I looked at Ella’s mother and told the truth.
“Yes. I paid her. I thought I was giving my son a memory. I was wrong. I am so sorry.”
Jeremiah turned on me instantly.
He accused me of choosing Ella over him.
But I was not choosing Ella over my son.
I was choosing the truth over denial.
I gave Ella’s mother the money and promised to cover whatever help Ella needed afterward. Jeremiah looked at me like I had betrayed him, then walked away into the dark.
Weeks later, he left for university barely speaking to me.
The house became quiet.
I sat at the kitchen table and wrote Ella an apology letter, knowing it could never undo the damage. Then I put away the old photo of her—the one Jeremiah had kept for years—and closed the drawer.
For the first time, I stopped protecting the version of my son I wanted to believe in.
And I started facing the one standing in front of me.