“I am so sorry, Mom.”
No explanation. No follow-up. Just a message that felt wrong in a way I couldn’t explain, only recognize. Tom had never apologized without meaning to fix something. Even as a child, he would follow every “sorry” with a reason, a plan, or at least an attempt to make things right.
This time, there was nothing.
I called him immediately. Voicemail. Again. Then his phone went off.
I told myself not to panic. College kids lose charge, get distracted, fall asleep in the middle of the day.
But something deeper—something instinctive—refused to let it go.
Ten minutes later, my phone rang from an unknown number.
“Hello, are you Tom’s mother?”
That was the moment everything shifted.
The voice on the other end explained that Tom had left something behind—a box—and asked that it be given to me. No one knew where he was. No one knew why he had gone.
That was enough.
I didn’t think. I just moved.
By the time I reached campus, the world felt unreal. Students laughed, walked in groups, carried coffee cups like nothing had changed. Meanwhile, my entire life had narrowed into one question: Where is my son?
A student handed me the box.
“He said it was important,” he added, uncertain.
That uncertainty followed me back to my car, where I finally opened it.
On top was a watch. Simple. Carefully chosen.
Underneath, an envelope.
My hands were shaking when I opened it.
<blockquote> “Mom, thank you for everything you’ve done for me. You gave me everything… especially your time. So I’m giving it back to you. You need to forget about me and the past. Just live.
Please don’t try to find me. — Tom”
</blockquote>
I read it once. Twice.
By the third time, the meaning landed.
My son thought he was a burden.
He thought leaving me would set me free.
And just like that, the fear inside me turned into something sharper—anger, not at him, but at everything that had taught him to measure his worth in what he took instead of what he gave.
He hadn’t run away.
He had sacrificed himself.
And that was something I refused to accept.
I started searching immediately. His apartment—empty. Job leads—vague. Friends—confused. Every answer only confirmed one thing: this had been planned.
That hurt the most.
He hadn’t trusted me enough to stay.
That night, I sat at the kitchen table staring at the watch until it felt like an accusation.
Time.
He thought he was giving me mine back.
But I didn’t want a life without my son in it. That had never been the deal.
The next morning, I stopped reacting and started thinking like him.
Tom didn’t disappear recklessly. He disappeared carefully. Somewhere quiet. Somewhere practical. Somewhere he could work without being noticed.
A small town.
Manual work.
Low cost.
I went through everything I could find—old searches, job listings, patterns—and one place kept appearing.
By sunrise, I was already on the road.
The town was easy to miss if you weren’t looking for it. But I was.
I found him behind a repair yard, sleeves rolled up, bent over an engine like he belonged there.
For a second, I just stood there, taking in the reality of him.
Alive.
Safe.
Gone.
“Tom?” I called.
He turned. Froze.
And in that moment, I saw it—the relief, the fear, the guilt—all at once.
I walked straight up to him and held up the watch.
“You gave me time?” I asked.
His voice cracked. “Mom, I—”
“You thought leaving me was a gift?”
“I thought you’d finally get to live your life.”
That sentence said everything.
And it broke something in me.
“Tom,” I said, softer now, “what life do you think I’ve been living?”
He hesitated. “The one you didn’t get… because of me.”
There it was.
The belief he had been carrying for years.
I shook my head.
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