Dateline
Feb 28, 2026

My son hit me just because my soup had no salt. The next morning he said, ‘My girlfriend is coming for lunch, Mom, cover it up and smile!’ Then he went to the office, and when he walked into

My son hit me just because my soup had no salt. The next morning he said, ‘My girlfriend is coming for lunch, Mom, cover it up and smile!’ Then he went to the office, and when he walked into his boss’s office, his face suddenly turned ashen, as if all the blood had drained from it.

My name is Margaret Hill, and until last winter I believed I had raised my son, Daniel, to be a decent man. He was thirty-two, worked as a financial analyst in downtown Chicago, and liked to tell people he was “self-made.” That evening, I had cooked chicken soup, the same recipe I had made since he was a child. When he tasted it, his face tightened. He said it was bland. I told him he could add salt himself. That was when his hand came across my cheek, sharp and sudden, knocking my glasses onto the kitchen floor.

For a moment, neither of us spoke. I tasted blood and salt at the same time. Daniel stared at me, breathing hard, as if I had done something unforgivable. Then he muttered that I was always trying to embarrass him and stormed into his room. I locked myself in the bathroom, pressed a towel to my face, and cried quietly so the neighbors wouldn’t hear. I did not call the police. I told myself it was a one-time thing, that stress had pushed him too far.

The next morning, the bruise had spread from purple to yellow. Daniel drank his coffee and scrolled through his  phone like nothing had happened. As he grabbed his coat, he said, “My girlfriend is coming for lunch today, Mom. Cover it up and smile. Don’t make things awkward.” Then he left for the office without waiting for an answer.

I stood in front of the mirror, applying foundation with shaking hands. I wondered when fear had replaced love in my own home. Around ten, my phone buzzed with a notification from the building’s security app. A  camera had recorded last night’s hallway. I watched, numb, as Daniel’s raised voice and sudden movement played back in grainy silence.

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