“Mom, if you want to keep living here, pay the rent like any other tenant or leave.”
My son’s voice, usually a source of warmth in my life, cut through the ambient chatter of Christmas dinner like a serrated knife. Twenty-five pairs of eyes—cousins, uncles, business associates—snapped toward me. The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating, drowning out the festive clink of crystal glasses and the low hum of jazz playing in the background.
What Matthew didn’t know was that this 2,000-square-foot penthouse on the Upper East Side, the one he boasted about to every colleague who would listen, was mine. The gray Cadillac he parked every night in the garage? Mine. The platinum credit card his wife, Audrey, used to buy Louis Vuitton bags on Fifth Avenue? Also mine.
Everything. Absolutely everything was mine.
I am Katherine Vega. I am sixty-four years old, and this is the story of how my silence nearly destroyed my only son, and how breaking it was the hardest thing I have ever done.
The aroma of roasted turkey still filled every corner of the penthouse, a scent that usually brought comfort but now turned my stomach. I had been up since 6:00 A.M., preparing the apple pie, the homemade pecan bars, and the candied yams that Matthew had loved since he was a boy. I moved from the kitchen to the dining room, my apron stained with gravy, my hands—wrinkled by years of unseen labor—trembling slightly as I held the heavy serving platter.
“Lucy, sit down for a moment,” my cousin Sarah whispered with that condescending smile I knew so well, mistaking my name in her fluster. “You’ve done enough. It’s fine.”
“I’m okay,” I replied, forcing a smile that felt like cracked plaster.From my position next to the open-plan kitchen counter, I could see the whole dining room. Matthew sat at the head of the table in his white linen shirt and that Rolex watch Audrey had given him last year—using my money, of course. He was talking to his cousin Alex about his latest project, an office building on Park Avenue.
“This month has been absolutely insane,” Matthew was saying, gesticulating grandly with his wine glass. “The client is pushing hard on the deadlines. But hey, the salary for a senior architect in New York isn’t bad at all. It’s enough to keep this place, the car, and everything else.”
Audrey, sitting next to him, smiled with satisfaction. She wore a red silk dress that probably cost more than a nurse’s monthly salary. Her perfectly manicured nails sparkled under the chandelier as she stroked Matthew’s arm.
“And even so,” Audrey added, slightly raising her voice so everyone could hear, “the bills never stop coming. This house, the decorations, maintaining the lifestyle… nothing is free in New York City.”