to me?â Mom looked at Phil and me. He hadnât even made it through the doorway yetâhe stood outside with his eyes planted firmly on the ground.
âPhil and Lucy worked so hard trying to make this place livable,â Aunt Jean said, an edge creeping into her voice.
âI knew Sara would never betray me like this!â Mom said. She looked frantically around the living room. We had found the photos and put them on the mantle along with a big vase for her flowers. Mom walked up to it, and, with one swipe of her arm, pulled everything onto the floor with a crash.
Aunt Jean rushed over to the pile. âLucy, honey, would you grab the dustpan?â she said, the waver in her voice the only sign she wasnât as calm as she looked. She took my fourth-grade picture and gently placed it back on the mantle.
Mom turned on me. âYouâll do no such thing,â she said. She turned back to Aunt Jean, gripping the handles of her walker so tight her arms were shaking. âWhere is everything? I want everything back in this house by tonight,â she said.
Aunt Jean straightened up to face her. âItâs gone, Jo,â she said quietly. âItâs gone. You canât get it back. It was garbage. Donât you remember what it was like with Mama when we were kids? Canât you see you were living just like her?â
âI am nothing like her,â Mom said, every word sounding like it had come from the center of her body. She was practically spitting with anger. âI am a collector . Everything in this house has . . . had a purpose and a meaning. How dare you come in here and get rid of my treasures!â
I hugged the wall as I crept back onto the porch where Phil was still standing.
Aunt Jeanâs eyes were wet as she tried to reason with Mom. âBut all of the mold and mildewâand what I found in the refrigerator! Itâs not healthy living like this. Donât you remember when we were kids? What if their friends found out?â She swung around and pointed at me. âDo you want them to make fun of her too? I remember what it was like even if you donât.â
âGet out!â Mom started screaming at her. âGet out! I will not tolerate this in my own house. You took advantage of me! You probably stole my things for yourself. Get out!â
Aunt Jean still didnât move. âJoanna, calm down. Itâs going to be okay. Look around at your beautiful house.â
âGet out!â Mom screamed at Aunt Jean one last time and, with all the effort she could muster, swung the walker at her. One leg caught Aunt Jean under the eye as she scrambled out of the way.
âFine!â Aunt Jean said as she made her way to the door, her fingers pressed to her rapidly swelling face. âYouâre on your own from now on. You donât want help, you just live here and drown in your own filth.â As she passed me in the doorway, she placed a hand on my cheek. âTake care of each other,â she said. âIâll do everything I can to help.â And then she was gone.
Mom lay crumpled in a heap on the living room floor, tears streaming down her cheeks. I walked over to try to help her up, but she swatted my arm away.
âI donât need you,â she said. She looked at Phil still standing in the doorway. âEither of you.â
We both watched silently as she dragged herself to the coffee table and used that to swing herself onto the chair. That night, she spent the first of many nights sleeping on our old green recliner.
These past few years, her room had gotten so cluttered and her bed hidden under such a huge mountain of clothes, it was almost impossible to sleep there. Her life in this house had shrunk down to the space around that old recliner.
Over time, Mom got less angry at Phil and me, but things were never the same as before. Sara loved to suck up to Mom and tell her over and over how she would have never
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