“She told me to wait for her at the bank… I didn’t see her again until many years later.”

My name is Matteo and I grew up believing that I had a simple, warm family, a refuge full of love. In my eyes as a child, my parents, Clara and Lorenzo, were inseparable — or at least that’s how I saw it with the innocence of childhood. My father had a small mechanic shop in a quiet village called Borgo San Vito, tucked away among the hills of Tuscany, and my mother stayed at home to take care of me. I was his only son, and in those days, I firmly believed that nothing could break our little world.

But one day, everything collapsed like a house of cards. Dad was suddenly fired. I didn’t understand what it meant exactly, but I watched her smile fade. He became quiet, dull, as if something inside him had broken. He found another job, yes, but the money disappeared like water between his fingers. At night, Mom’s screams filled the house, accompanied by the rumble of broken dishes. I hid under the covers, trembling, praying for the storm to end.

And then, the hardest blow came. Dad found out that Mom was cheating on him with another man. Our house became a battlefield: screaming, crying, and the door that slammed shut when Dad left. He left us both: me and Mom. I missed him so much that I felt short of breath. I begged Mom to take me with him, but she screamed,
“It’s your fault, Matteo! He betrayed us, he’s a piece of trash man!”
His words were like knives, but they couldn’t tear the love I felt for Dad from my chest.

One cold morning, Mom came up with a smile that I hadn’t seen in a long time.
“Get your things ready, honey, let’s go to the sea!” he said.
My heart raced — the sea! It sounded like a dream. He was packing clothes in an old suitcase. I wanted to take my little trains, but he stopped me:
“I’ll buy you new ones there, much nicer.”
I trusted her. How could we not do it? It was my mother.

We went to the bus station, a chaos of voices and haste. He bought the tickets and told me that before we took the big bus, we would make a quick stop. We got on an old bus, which rattled with every bump. I looked out the window, dreaming of the waves, of the sand castles. Finally, we go down in front of a gray, dirty building with peeling walls.
“Wait for me here, Matteo,” he said, pointing to a wooden bench.
“I’m going to buy you an ice cream. Stay put, yes?”

I nodded, sat down, and waited.

An hour passed. Then another. Mom didn’t come back. The sun began to set, the wind was getting colder, and a knot of fear was tightening my throat. He looked at the illuminated windows, hoping to see his figure with an ice cream. But it didn’t come. Night fell on me like a heavy blanket, and I, a lonely child, was left there. I cried, I called out to her, but my voice was lost in the darkness. Exhausted, freezing and scared, I curled up on the bench and fell asleep.

I woke up, but I wasn’t on the street. I was in a warm bed, in an unfamiliar room. For a second I thought Mom had taken me there.
“Mom!” I shouted.

But the one who walked through the door was… dad. And behind him, a woman he did not know.

I jumped out of bed, my heart in my throat.
“Dad! Where’s Mommy? He went for an ice cream and disappeared! What happened to her?”

He sat down next to me, his face tense. He took my hand and said in a firm voice:
“Matteo, your mother abandoned you. He’s gone. And he’s not coming back.”

It was like lightning.
Abandon me?
Mothers don’t do that. I shouted that it was a lie, that he had promised to take me to the sea. But Dad hugged me tightly and repeated,
“He’s not coming back, son.”

It didn’t soften the truth for me. He gave it to me like this, raw, direct.

Years passed. We move to Positano, a coastal town where the sea roars against the rocks. The woman who was with Dad was called Giulia. He was kind, though at first he didn’t want to know anything about her. Eventually, I began to call her mom — not the one who left me, but the one who took care of me. My sister, Sofia, was born, and for the first time I felt like I had a real family. A home without screams, without secrets, without betrayal.

As I grew up, Dad told me more. Mom had called him the morning after dropping me off on that bench, in a cold voice, giving him the address, and then hanging up. They took custody of her and we never heard from her again.

Life went on. We moved to a bigger house. I finished school, I graduated with honors, I got a good job. When I managed to save enough, I bought my own apartment in downtown Positano. Dad and Giulia helped me with everything.

One night, as I came home from work in the rain, I saw a figure sitting on a bench in front of my building. I felt a chill. He raised his head and murmured,
“Matteo…”
“I’m your mother,” he said, his voice breaking.

I was paralyzed. She was an aged, unrecognizable woman.
“Why now? After so many years?”

I took out the phone and called Dad and Giulia.

They arrived immediately. Their presence reassured me. Dad looked at me and said,
“It’s your decision, son… if you think it deserves a place in your life.”

I looked at her. The woman who had left me alone on a freezing night. And I didn’t feel anything. Only empty. The building’s doorbell rang. Dad went to open the door and she tried to follow him.

Then I spoke,
“You’re not my mother. My mother is the one who raised me, who supported me when you ran away. I don’t want your apology. Go away. And don’t come back.”

She cried. But I didn’t move.

I watched her walk away, swallowed by the darkness.

I turned around, hugged Dad and Giulia with all my might.
“I love you,” I told them, my voice trembling.
“Thank you for everything.”

They were my family. My home. My salvation.

And she… just a distant memory of a past that no longer has power over me.

Do not abandon your children. They did not ask to come into the world. If they were brought in, the least they deserve is love. I, Matteo, know this better than anyone.