Mara tried to pay me at first. I refused, every time.
“I’m not a service,” I told her. “I’m just helping.”
My boyfriend didn’t see it that way.
“You’re being used,” he said more than once. “Every week? For free? That’s not kindness—that’s charity she’s taking advantage of.”
I brushed it off, but the words stuck. Especially on nights when I was exhausted, when I canceled my own plans, when I wondered if maybe he was right.
Then, suddenly, it ended.
Mara got promoted. Big promotion. Different city. Different life.
Her last day at work was chaos—meetings, emails, rushed hugs. She waved at me from across the office, mouthed “Thank you,” and then she was gone. No goodbye. No long conversation. No closure.
I felt foolish. Embarrassed. Like I’d poured a year of my life into something that evaporated without a trace. My boyfriend didn’t say “I told you so,” but he didn’t need to.
Three weeks later, an envelope arrived in my mailbox.
Inside were two plane tickets and a handwritten letter.
“Come visit,” it said. Nothing more.
I almost didn’t go. Pride is a stubborn thing. But curiosity won.
When I landed, Mara was waiting at the airport with her kids. They screamed my name and ran into me like I’d never left. I blinked hard, suddenly unable to speak.
At her new apartment, she asked me to sit down. Her hands were shaking. She placed a set of car keys in my palm.
“It’s yours,” she said, already crying. “Paid in full.”
I tried to laugh, tried to hand them back. She stopped me.
“You watched my kids 52 Fridays,” she said. “You never asked for money. You never made me feel small. Because of those Fridays, I worked overtime. I got noticed. I got promoted. I got a bonus.”
She took a breath, steadying herself.
