My daughter married a Korean man when she was 21. She didn’t come home for twelve years, but every year she sends $150,000. This Christmas, I decided to go see her quietly. When I opened her front door… I froze.
“Mom?”
The voice was soft, almost hesitant, but I would recognize it anywhere. My heart skipped a beat. I turned around slowly.
There, at the entrance to the living room, she stood.
“Maria…” my voice broke.
She looked exactly the same—and yet entirely different. Her face was still beautiful, but pale. Her eyes, those eyes that were once full of light, now carried a heavy exhaustion. For a moment, neither of us moved.
Then she ran toward me.
“Mom!” She held me tight, so tight it hurt. I could feel her body trembling. She began to cry—not the soft weeping from before, but a deep, broken sob that ripped from her chest.
I held her just like I did when she was a child. “My baby… my child… I’m here,” I whispered.
We stayed like that for a long time.
When she finally let go, she held my face in her hands, as if she wanted to make sure I was really there. “Why didn’t you tell me you were coming?” she asked.
I just looked into her eyes. “Because I was afraid… afraid you would stop me.”
She lowered her gaze.
The silence between us grew heavy. I finally asked the question that had been haunting my heart for years.
“Where is Kang-Jun?”
She didn’t answer.
I asked again, softer this time but firm: “My child… where is your husband?”
Maria stepped back slowly and sat on the sofa. Her hands began to shake. I sat down next to her, my heart heavy.
“Mom…” she began, but her voice cracked. She took a deep breath. “I didn’t want to tell you. I didn’t want you to worry.”
“Tell me the truth,” I said.
She closed her eyes. When she opened them again, they were filled with tears.
“Kang-Jun… died ten years ago.”
It felt as if the world went silent.
“What?” I could hardly breathe. “Ten years…? But you said—”
“I lied,” she whispered.
The words fell like stones on my chest.
“He died in a car accident,” she continued. “Only two years after we got married.”
I put my hand over my mouth. My mind was spinning.
“But the money?” I finally asked. “Every year… the $150,000?”
She smiled bitterly. “There was no rich man, Mom. Not like people think.”
I looked at her, not understanding.
“When he died, he had debts,” she said. “A lot of debt. I had nothing. No family here, no money, no job. I was alone… completely alone in a foreign country.”
My heart broke.
“I started working… small jobs at first. Cleaning, restaurants, anything. But it wasn’t enough.” She clenched her hands tightly. “Then someone showed me a way to make money fast.”
I suddenly felt cold. “What way?”
She didn’t look at me directly. “I started working for people who move money overseas… illegally.”
My breath caught.
“That money you saw… it isn’t all mine,” she said. “I just keep it for them. I move it, hide it… and in exchange, I get a cut.”
I felt my hands shake. “My child… why?”
She suddenly looked at me, her eyes full of pain. “Because I didn’t want you to suffer! Because I wanted you to have a better life! Every time I sent money to you, I told myself: ‘At least Mom is safe. At least she is eating well.’”
Tears began to roll down my cheeks.
“But you…” I whispered, “you suffered alone.”
She said nothing.
I took her hands. They were cold.
“Why didn’t you come home?” I asked.
She slowly shook her head. “I couldn’t. Once I got into this work… there was no way out. They watch you. If you try to leave… you disappear.”
A shiver went through my body.
“I was afraid,” she continued. “Not for myself… but for you. If I do something wrong, they could hurt you. That’s why I kept my distance. That’s why I only sent money and spoke very little.”
The truth cut through my heart like a knife.
All these years, I thought she had forgotten me.
But she was protecting me.
I held her tight. “My child… money means nothing. Nothing! I would rather be poor and have you with me.”
She began to cry. “I know… but I realized it too late.”
We sat in silence for a long time.
Then I remembered something. “The house… why does it look so empty?”
She laughed bitterly. “Because it isn’t a home. It’s just a place to store money. I don’t really live here. I move all the time.”
My heart grew even heavier.
“Listen to me,” I said firmly. “You can’t go on like this. You have to get away.”
She looked at me helplessly. “It’s not that easy, Mom.”
“There is always a way,” I said. “We will find one. Together.”
She went quiet.
I took her face in my hands. “You are not alone. I’m here. This time, I’m not going to let you go.”
For the first time, a small spark of hope appeared in her eyes.
“Do you think… it’s possible?” she asked softly.
I nodded, even though I wasn’t sure myself. “Yes. Because we have each other.”
Outside, the sun began to set, and the light fell through the window, soft and warm—like a new beginning.
But deep inside, I knew: the road ahead would not be easy.
Because someone else had just opened the door.
And someone had heard everything.
