“Roles reversed,” I’d whisper.
“Don’t get clever,” she’d murmur without opening her eyes.
It wasn’t perfect—but it was ours.
Until I turned fifteen and decided it wasn’t.
High school changed everything.
Status suddenly came with car keys.
Who drove. Who got dropped off.
Who arrived shiny—and who still smelled like bus tickets.
I was firmly in the second category.
“Why don’t you ask her?” my friend Leah said. “My parents helped me get one.”
“Because my grandma counts grapes,” I replied. “She’s not exactly the ‘buy-a-car’ type.”
Still, envy crept in.
So one night, I tried.
“Everyone drives now.”
Grandma sat at the table counting bills.
Her glasses slipped down her nose.
The good mug—with the cracked rim and faded flowers—rested beside her.
“Grandma?”
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