Every Man for Himself
Mum, you honestly wouldnt believe what the housing markets like right now, Matthew muttered as he anxiously shuffled through a stack of printouts, first stacking them neatly and then spreading them like a deck of cards across the kitchen table. Prices are going up every week. If we dont put down the deposit right now, someone else will snap up this flat.
Linda slid a cup of lukewarm tea towards her son and sat down opposite. She glimpsed floorplans, numbers, repayment charts flashing past. It was a three-bedroom in a new developmentfinally, Timmy and Sophie could each have their own room.
How much are you short? she asked.
Twenty-eight thousand pounds, Matthew said, pinching the bridge of his nose. I know its a lot. But Annies at her wits end, the kids are growing, and were still living out of suitcases in rented places
Linda looked at her son and saw the little boy who once brought her bouquets of buttercups. Thirty-two years old, two kids, and that wrinkle between his eyebrows was still therejust as it was when hed worry about forgotten homework.
Ive got some savings in my account, she said.
Mum, Ill pay you back, I swear. As soon as weve settled down, Ill start putting it back bit by bit.
She rested her worn, kitchen-hardened hand on his.
Matthew, love, its for my grandchildren. Why are we even talking about paying me back? Family matters more than money.
At the bank, Linda filled out forms in the neat, practiced handwriting shed honed in thirty years as a bookkeeper. Twenty-eight grandnearly everything shed managed to set aside over the past few years. For a rainy day, just in case, for you never know.
Matthew hugged her tightly right there at the counter, not caring that there was a queue.
Youre the best, you know that? I wont forget this.
Linda patted his back. Off you go. Annies probably waiting for you.
…The first few months after the move were a whirlwind of trips from one end of town to the other. Linda would show up clutching bags from Sainsburyschicken, rice, butter, yoghurt for the kids. Shed help Annie hang curtains, piece together flat-pack furniture, scrub builders dust off the sills.
Timmy, be careful with the tools! shed call, all while hanging the curtains and explaining to her daughter-in-law how to make cottage pie from scratch.
Annie would nod, idly scrolling on her phone. Matthew came home late, tired, barely said a word, wolfed down his mums casserole, and vanished into the bedroom.
Thanks, Mum, hed mutter in passing. Honestly, dont know what wed do without you.
Six months went by, and then one evening the phone lit up with his name.
Mum, Ive hit a bit of a wall This months mortgage payments due and the cars broken down. Im short by about a grand.
Linda sent the money, not even asking questions. Its always harder for the younger ones, she understoodadjusting to all the new expenses, with two little ones and stressful jobs. Theyd sort themselves out and pay her back. Or not. What did it really matter, when it was family?
Years trickled by like water slipping through her fingers. Timmy turned seven, and Linda bought him that Lego set hed been begging for, the very one his parents refused all year. Sophie spun across the living room in a brand new dresspale pink, sparkly, just like her favourite fairy-tale princess.
Gran, youre the best! Sophie squealed, throwing her arms around Lindas neck, the scent of sweets and kids shampoo clinging to her.
Every weekend, Linda would either have the grandchildren over or whisk them off to the theatre, the funfair, or the ice rink. She bought ice creams, toys, books. Her old coat pockets bulged with sweets and wet wipes.
Five years passed in this generous, self-imposed servitude. Mortgage top-upsMum, were skint this month. Sick days with the kidsMum, we just cant get time off work. Weekly groceriesMum, youre off to the shop anyway
Gratitude came less and less often
That morning, she gazed up at brown streaks running across her own kitchen ceiling. The neighbours upstairs had flooded her flat, and now it was barely liveable.
She dialled her son.
“Matthew, I need help with the repairs. Theres been a leak and I dont know when Ill get any compensation
Mum, her son cut in, Ive got completely different priorities right now. The kids have after-school clubs, Sophies started dance, Annies doing evening classes…
Im not asking for much. Just some help finding a builder. Or at least
Honestly, Mum, Ive got no time for that right now, especially for something so trivial, Matthew repeated like he hadnt heard her at all. Lets talk about this later. Give me a ring, yeah?
Beep beep beep
Linda put down her phone. The home screen flashed upa New Years photo from last year. Her, Timmy, Sophie. All smiles.
All those times hed taken money barely thinking. All those weekends shed given to the children. All that time, energy, carethat was all in the past, when things were different. Now, there were other priorities.
A cold drip splashed onto her hand.
The very next day, Annie rangan event so rare, Linda tensed up even before her daughter-in-law spoke.
Linda, Matthew told me about your little chat, Annie began, her tone clipped. You do realise everyones meant to handle their own problems, right? Were juggling our own mortgage, all our bills
Linda almost laughed. That mortgage, which shed practically covered every third month. The deposit, which had been mostly her money.
Of course, Annie, she replied, flat and even. Were all responsible for ourselves.
“Glad weve cleared that up. Matthew got worried youd taken offence. You havent, have you?
No. Not at all.
Beep beep beep
Linda placed her phone on the table and stared at it as if it were some strange little bug. She went to the window, but the view behind the grubby glass offered no comfort.
Nights dragged on, her mind whirring as she lay watching the dark, replaying the last five years.
Shed created this herself. Raised her son into thinking a mother was an endless resource.
The next morning, Linda picked up the phone and rang the estate agent.
Id like to put my cottage on the market. House with a garden, just outside London, all mains connected.
That little house she and her late husband had built together for twenty years. The apple trees she planted while carrying Matthew. The veranda where so many summer evenings had been spent.
A buyer arrived within a month. Linda signed the papers, refusing to dwell on what she was selling. The money hit her account, and she calmly split it up: flat repairs, a new savings account, and a small buffer for rainy days.
The builders started work the next week. Linda chose the tiles, the wallpaper, the tapseverything. For the first time in years, she spent money on herself, not saving just in case or for someone elses emergency.
Matthew didnt call. Not for two weeks, then three, then a month. Linda stayed silent too.
The first call came right after work finished. Her new kitchen gleamed, the windows were draught-proof, and not a single rusty drip remained.
Mum, why arent you coming round? Sophie keeps asking about you.
Ive been busy.
With what?
Life, Matthew. My own life.
She visited the next week. Brought the kids a book eachlovely gifts, but nothing extravagant. She sat for tea, chatted about the weather and Timmys progress at school. Politely declined their offer to stay for dinner.
Mum, could you watch the kids on Saturday? Annie and I
Sorry, cant. Ive got plans.
Linda saw the confusion on her sons face. He didnt understand. Not yet.
Months passed, and understanding came, slowly, painfully. Without mums loans, the mortgage swallowed a third of their income. Without free childcare, there was no one to leave the kids with.
Meanwhile, Linda opened a new ISA at a decent rate. Bought herself a proper winter coatwarm, smart, not from the sale rail. Took herself off for a fortnight at a spa hotel. Joined a Nordic walking club.
She remembered how Annies parents always kept their distancea polite card at Christmas, a short visit every couple of months. No money, no help, no sacrifices. And not a single complaint from their daughter.
Maybe theyd had it right all along?
Her meetings with the grandchildren became brief and routine. Linda would deliver a small present, chat about school or friends, and take her leavenever staying over, never taking the kids home for the weekend.
One day, Timmy asked, Gran, why dont you take us to the park anymore?
Grans got her own things to do now, Timmy, love.
He didnt understand. But Matthew, lurking in the doorway, finally seemed to get it.
Linda would head back to her newly decorated flat, scented with fresh paint and new furniture. Make herself a proper brew, settle with a book in her comfy chairbought with money from the cottage sale.
Guilt? Yes, sometimes it came at night. But less and less. Because Linda, at last, understood this: loving someone didnt mean sacrificing yourselfespecially when no one notices, or thanks you, for it.
She chose herself. For the first time in thirty-two years of being a mother.











