My name is Matthew. Growing up, I thought my family was perfect — my father, Richard, and my mother, Chlóe, seemed inseparable. But when my father lost his job, the laughter faded. Stress, shouting, and broken plates became the new normal. Then came the betrayal: my mother had been seeing another man. After one final fight, my father walked out, and my mother filled my ears with blame.
One morning, she promised me a trip to the sea. Excited, I packed, only for her to leave me on a cold bench, alone, waiting for ice cream that never came. I woke up in a strange room — my father’s new home. He hugged me and whispered the truth: “Your mother abandoned you.”
Years passed. My father remarried a wonderful woman, Usúla, and gave me a real family with my little brother, Denny. I built a good life in Positano, but one stormy night, the past returned. My mother, aged and broken, stood outside my building.
“I’m your mother,” she said.
But I had already learned: family isn’t blood. Family is who stays.
“You’re not my mother,” I told her. “My family never left.”
And I closed that chapter forever.