She moved closer to him.
“You know what your mother is like. She sometimes spills water. She dirties the floor. I only wanted…”
But Shindu was no longer listening. Her voice faded slowly like an echo in an empty room.
He turned around.
Near the entrance, his mother was still standing. She stood very straight, her hands clasped in front of her, her back slightly bent, the old scarf dark with rain.
There was no accusation in her eyes, no anger, no bitterness — only exhaustion.
The kind of exhaustion that comes from living long enough to know that sometimes the truth changes nothing.
Shindu walked toward her.
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
His voice had grown stronger.
She looked at her son, her gaze softening.
“I did not want you to worry.”
She paused, then added:
“I did not want you to think badly of your wife.”
Those words painfully tightened something in Shindu’s chest. Even after being forced to sleep outside, she was still thinking about protecting the family.
Ada stood behind them, still crying.
“You have to understand me,” she said, her voice broken. “I handled this house alone for seven years. I was tired. I just wanted everything to remain clean.”
Shindu turned to her.
He walked slowly to the door and opened the iron gate. A blast of wind and rain entered the living room, gently making the curtain sway.
He pointed outside.
“That mat — is that how you keep the house clean?”
Ada did not reply.
For the first time in her life, she did not know what to say.
Shindu looked one last time around the room. The sparkling chandelier, the brand-new sofa. Everything looked clean and perfect.
But the price of that cleanliness had been an elderly mother sleeping outside for three months.
He turned back to his mother.
“Mom,” he said softly, “tonight you sleep inside.”
She immediately shook her head.
“That is not necessary, my son.”
“No,” Shindu said.
His voice was not loud, but firm as steel.
“This house cannot continue like this.”
Ada swallowed.
“What are you going to do?”
Shindu looked at her.
There was no hesitation left in his eyes.
“I am going to fix everything.”
Ada tried to smile, but it no longer looked natural.
“You are overreacting because of a misunderstanding.”
But Shindu knew it was not a misunderstanding. It was the truth.
And truth often arrives late. But once it comes, it brings consequences that no one in this house is prepared for, because Ada still did not know one thing.
For the past seven years, she had not been the only one in this house hiding a secret.
The quiet old mother standing near the door had one too.
And when that secret was finally revealed, this house would no longer belong to the person Ada thought it did.
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Shindu stood in the middle of the living room, his breathing still heavy from the anger that had just erupted. He stared at Ada for a long time — so long that the sound of the rain outside seemed to grow louder in the silent room.
At last, he spoke, his voice low and firm.
“Tomorrow, you leave this house.”
Ada froze for a second. She was sure she had heard wrong.
“What? What did you say?”
“You heard me.”
The words were as cold as metal.
Ada burst into tears. Not dramatic, noisy sobs, but the kind where tears simply flow down slowly.
“You are throwing me out because of her?” she choked out.
Shindu did not answer right away, but before he could speak, a thin and fragile hand gently touched his shoulder.
“Don’t make this a big issue.”
It was his mother’s voice — soft, calm, but strong enough to make everyone in the room turn toward her.
She stood there, the same old scarf wrapped around her head, her plastic sandals still wet from the rain.
Looking at her, no one would have imagined that this woman could change the balance of power in this elegant living room.
But the look in her eyes now was different.
It was no longer the tired look of someone who had just slept outside. It was the look of someone who had been silent for far too long.
She turned to Ada.
“You thought this house belonged to my son?”
Ada frowned.
“What a strange question. Of course it does,” she said, her voice still trembling with tears. “Shindu sent the money to buy this house. He told me from the beginning.”
The old woman did not answer immediately.
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