Robert, the oldest, owned a successful auto parts shop in Austin.
Claudia, the middle child, posted Bible verses online every morning and called herself a woman of faith.
And Daniel, the youngest, the favorite, the one who once promised her in church that he would never leave her alone.
Daniel was the one who brought her to the nursing home.
“Just two weeks, Mom,” he told her. “Only while we remodel your room.”
He arrived with a brown suitcase, a knitted blanket, and a tin of butter cookies. Mrs. Mercedes looked peaceful that day, almost excited, because she believed her children were preparing a beautiful room for her.
“They’re putting my bed near a window,” she told me with a smile. “Daniel said I’ll be able to see the garden.”
Two weeks became seven months.
Seven months became two years.
The blanket lost the smell of home, the cookie tin sat empty on her dresser, and her children slowly stopped calling.
At first, they sent voice messages.
“Soon, Mom.”
“We’re coming next weekend.”
“Just be patient, Ma.”
Then came the excuses.
Traffic.
Work.
A cold.
A family emergency.
Always something.
Every Sunday, Mrs. Mercedes put on her nicest cardigan and saved small caramel candies in her purse for her grandchildren. She sat in the visitors’ room from ten in the morning until the sun went down.
“They probably got delayed,” she would say.
And every Sunday, I smiled even though my chest hurt.
Because no one was coming.
Then one Thursday afternoon, she heard the truth.
Claudia called the front desk and didn’t realize the speakerphone was on.
“My mother is very old,” Claudia said sharply. “If she gets worse, don’t take her to a private hospital. We’re not spending money on something useless.”
I froze.
Mrs. Mercedes was standing right behind me, leaning on her cane.
Claudia continued.
“And if she asks for us, just tell her we visited. She barely remembers things anyway.”
Mrs. Mercedes didn’t cry.
That was the worst part.
She just turned around slowly and walked back to her room.
The next morning, she asked me for paper.
“What for?” I asked softly.
She looked at me with tired eyes but a steady voice.
“To remind them that old does not mean stupid.”
For three days, she wrote.
Page after page.
Sometimes her hand shook so badly I had to hold the paper still. When she finished, she folded everything carefully and placed it inside her Bible, tucked between the pages of Psalm 27.
I didn’t ask what she had written.
But I knew it mattered.
On her last night, she asked for her navy-blue dress, her black shoes, and the fake pearls.
“Tonight they’ll come,” she whispered.
At 11:30 p.m., her blood pressure dropped.
At 11:46 p.m., she asked me not to turn off the light.
At 11:50 p.m., footsteps echoed down the hallway.
Her face changed.
She smiled like a little girl waiting at a window.
But it wasn’t her children.
It was Mr. Ocampo, a local attorney from San Antonio, soaked from the rain, holding three yellow envelopes under his arm.
“Mrs. Mercedes asked me to come before the light went out,” he said.
She lifted one trembling hand.“Come in, counselor,” she whispered. “My children may be late again, but they should not miss the truth.”
Then, outside the nursing home, headlights swept across the windows.