The banging on the door grew louder, accompanied by rude shouts demanding payment. Mark covered his ears with the pillow, trembling with fear. His stomach ached. He hadn’t eaten anything since lunch yesterday. He only ate raw instant noodles because the gas for his portable stove had run out, and he had no money to buy a new canister. His face, once neat and arrogant, was now gaunt, covered by a scruffy beard, and his eyes were sunken in terrible dark circles. He looked at the news on social media on the screen of a cheap, cracked phone. There was a photo of me next to Mr. Harrison launching a company social responsibility project.
I was smiling elegantly, Mark cried. Tears of belated regret soaked the old pillow. He remembered again the comfortable house, the delicious food, and the wife who had served him with all her heart. He had thrown it all away for a momentary pleasure, and now he had to pay the price with a life of suffering. Back in my life, after the meeting and signing some important documents, I asked the chauffeur to take me to the place I most wanted to go, Oakidge Cemetery. The evening sky was a reddish orange color.
As I entered the cemetery grounds, a gentle breeze rustled the leaves of the trees. I walked to my mother’s grave. The grave was now well tended. The grass was beginning to grow green, and her name was beautifully engraved on the black marble headstone. I knelt beside my mother’s headstone and placed a basket of fresh, fragrant jasmine flowers, her favorite. I gently caressed my mother’s name engraved on the stone. There were no more tears of pain constricting my chest as there were a month ago, only a warm longing and deep gratitude. I began to speak as if my mother were sitting next to me. I told her about today’s meeting, about Mr.
Harrison, who had helped me so much, and about how I was beginning to rebuild my life. I also whispered softly that justice had been done, that the person who had hurt us had paid the price, and that for my own peace of mind, I had forgiven that past. Mom, I whispered softly, my voice carried by the evening wind. I’m not crying anymore. I’m strong now. You don’t have to worry anymore. The legacy of courage you gave me is far more valuable than all this wealth. I closed my eyes for a moment and felt my mother’s presence in the breeze that caressed my face. It was like her last warm hug.