Shared Time by Scardavino
Two brothers visit their ageing mother who seems no longer to be able to tell them apart.
The door to my mother's house always creaked the same way, a sad groan announcing my arrival. Inside, time was different. It smelled of medicine, of boiled chicken, and of a heavy silence.
Three hours. That was my share every Friday. Marcos, my brother, came on Tuesdays. At first, Mom got confused. She called me by his name, asked about things I hadn't lived. At first, we corrected her: It's me, Mom, I'm Javier. Marcos visited you on Tuesday.
But seeing her face in that moment of confusion and disorientation was like giving her an invisible slap. Her eyes, once so alive, clouded with infinite sadness. Until one day, Marcos called me.
"Javi, what if... we stop insisting she recognize us by our names?" His voice was tired, broken. "What if we just become the son? It'll be easier for her. And we'll spare ourselves that... painful moment."
I hung up and cried. Cried for what it meant, for the miserable comfort that idea carried. Accepting that my mother had forgotten me forever.
The following Friday, when she smiled at me from her chair and said, "Son, it's so good to see you," I just smiled back and kissed her forehead.
"I've missed you too, Mom."
That was how our arrangement was born, our guilty relief. Marcos and I stopped existing as individuals in that room. We were one son, a part-time consolation. I told her how work was going (Marcos's work, he's an architect), and she nodded, content. I promised that next time I'd bring the cookies she loved (the ones Marcos baked well). It was a beautiful lie, a patch thrown over the abyss.
But the burden didn't vanish; it transformed. Now I carried not only the sadness of seeing her like that, but the weight of representing two people. Sometimes, when leaving, I'd sit in the car and for five minutes couldn't start the engine. Who was I? Javier, who had just pretended to be Marcos? Or Marcos, who had pretended to be Javier on Tuesday? Our identities were dissolving into hers.
The real fracture came one Tuesday night. My phone rang. It was Marcos. All I could hear was his breathing, broken by sobs.
"Javi... today she called me Javier. And I said yes."
His voice carried the exhaustion of the whole world. Nothing else needed to be said. On the other end of the line, I felt his defeat exactly as I felt mine. We weren't two brothers organizing care. We were two castaways, taking turns clinging to the same small lifebuoy that was slowly sinking.
That Friday, everything was the same. The creak of the door, the smell, her smile.
"Son, you're here."
I approached, took her hand, and told her the truth, the only one that mattered in that room.
"Yes, Mom. I'm here."
And for once, I wasn't pretending. Because in that moment, I wasn't Javier or Marcos. I was simply her son. And she, simply my mother. And in that necessary lie, for three hours a week, we found a consolation as fragile and real as the pulse of her hand in mine.
The end began, like so many things with her, with a whisper. "I'm cold," in the middle of June, while the sun filled the room. The light poured over her, illuminating the blue veins of her closed eyelids. Her hand in mine weighed less and less, as if little by little it were turning to air.
The shifts continued. Marcos on Tuesdays, me on Fridays. But The Son was no longer a convenience. It had become an act of desperate love, the last gift we could give her: the illusion of a constant presence, of a single devoted child who never left her side. The lie had transmuted into truth.
The last time I went, I knew it was the end. The nurse looked at me with that professional pity that hurts more than hatred. "She doesn't let go of this," she said, pointing at an old photo on the nightstand. The photo was of Marcos and me, seven and five years old, perched on an olive tree in our grandparents' field. We were wild creatures, knees covered in mud, faces split by smiles too big for our cheeks. Sometimes she held that photo, running her thumb over the plastic frame as if caressing a precious memory.
That day I didn't talk about work or cookies. I sat down, held her hand, and told her about the olive tree. I described how the sun warmed the bark, the smell of thyme and dry earth, the scare when Marcos slipped and scraped his knee, and how, not wanting to cry in front of me, he laughed, saying the tree had tickled him.
I don't know if she heard me. Her breathing was faint. But a tiny smile, just a crease at the corner of her lips, appeared. And I knew, with a certainty that pierced my chest, that she wasn't with The Son. She was with us. With her two children, with the memory of that afternoon, with the echo of our laughter in the fields. In her confused mind, she had managed the impossible: to merge us not into one, but into the very love she held for us.
She passed that night, peacefully. The nurse said she didn't suffer.
Now, months later, Marcos and I meet for lunch on Sundays. At first it was awkward. We were two ghosts who had taken turns inhabiting a concept, and now we didn't know how to be two again. Until one day, he brought a box of cookies. They were terrible, burnt at the edges. He had baked them himself.
"It was supposed to be my turn next week," he said, his voice breaking. "I was going to bring them to her."
We looked at each other and, for the first time in years, we didn't see a substitute, the administrator of a merciful lie. We saw the brother who had climbed the olive tree with me. We saw the two boys we'd been when she was young and strong and her love was an unbreakable wall against the world.
The guilt never fully left. The wear had changed us forever. But in the silence of that Sunday, breaking a bad cookie made with love, we understood. We hadn't shared an identity out of convenience. We had shared the weight of a farewell. And in that act of carrying the burden together, we had found, at the end of the road, not hypocrisy, but the purest echo of her love: that we were, and always would be, brothers.
The house of our childhood is empty now. But sometimes, when I walk past it, I swear I still hear, faintly, the creak of the door. And it's not a sad sound. It's the sound of a shift ending, and of a love that, in the end, needed no schedules to be infinite.
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Three hours. That was my share every Friday. Marcos, my brother, came on Tuesdays. At first, Mom got confused. She called me by his name, asked about things I hadn't lived. At first, we corrected her: It's me, Mom, I'm Javier. Marcos visited you on Tuesday.
But seeing her face in that moment of confusion and disorientation was like giving her an invisible slap. Her eyes, once so alive, clouded with infinite sadness. Until one day, Marcos called me.
"Javi, what if... we stop insisting she recognize us by our names?" His voice was tired, broken. "What if we just become the son? It'll be easier for her. And we'll spare ourselves that... painful moment."
I hung up and cried. Cried for what it meant, for the miserable comfort that idea carried. Accepting that my mother had forgotten me forever.
The following Friday, when she smiled at me from her chair and said, "Son, it's so good to see you," I just smiled back and kissed her forehead.
"I've missed you too, Mom."
That was how our arrangement was born, our guilty relief. Marcos and I stopped existing as individuals in that room. We were one son, a part-time consolation. I told her how work was going (Marcos's work, he's an architect), and she nodded, content. I promised that next time I'd bring the cookies she loved (the ones Marcos baked well). It was a beautiful lie, a patch thrown over the abyss.
But the burden didn't vanish; it transformed. Now I carried not only the sadness of seeing her like that, but the weight of representing two people. Sometimes, when leaving, I'd sit in the car and for five minutes couldn't start the engine. Who was I? Javier, who had just pretended to be Marcos? Or Marcos, who had pretended to be Javier on Tuesday? Our identities were dissolving into hers.
The real fracture came one Tuesday night. My phone rang. It was Marcos. All I could hear was his breathing, broken by sobs.
"Javi... today she called me Javier. And I said yes."
His voice carried the exhaustion of the whole world. Nothing else needed to be said. On the other end of the line, I felt his defeat exactly as I felt mine. We weren't two brothers organizing care. We were two castaways, taking turns clinging to the same small lifebuoy that was slowly sinking.
That Friday, everything was the same. The creak of the door, the smell, her smile.
"Son, you're here."
I approached, took her hand, and told her the truth, the only one that mattered in that room.
"Yes, Mom. I'm here."
And for once, I wasn't pretending. Because in that moment, I wasn't Javier or Marcos. I was simply her son. And she, simply my mother. And in that necessary lie, for three hours a week, we found a consolation as fragile and real as the pulse of her hand in mine.
The end began, like so many things with her, with a whisper. "I'm cold," in the middle of June, while the sun filled the room. The light poured over her, illuminating the blue veins of her closed eyelids. Her hand in mine weighed less and less, as if little by little it were turning to air.
The shifts continued. Marcos on Tuesdays, me on Fridays. But The Son was no longer a convenience. It had become an act of desperate love, the last gift we could give her: the illusion of a constant presence, of a single devoted child who never left her side. The lie had transmuted into truth.
The last time I went, I knew it was the end. The nurse looked at me with that professional pity that hurts more than hatred. "She doesn't let go of this," she said, pointing at an old photo on the nightstand. The photo was of Marcos and me, seven and five years old, perched on an olive tree in our grandparents' field. We were wild creatures, knees covered in mud, faces split by smiles too big for our cheeks. Sometimes she held that photo, running her thumb over the plastic frame as if caressing a precious memory.
That day I didn't talk about work or cookies. I sat down, held her hand, and told her about the olive tree. I described how the sun warmed the bark, the smell of thyme and dry earth, the scare when Marcos slipped and scraped his knee, and how, not wanting to cry in front of me, he laughed, saying the tree had tickled him.
I don't know if she heard me. Her breathing was faint. But a tiny smile, just a crease at the corner of her lips, appeared. And I knew, with a certainty that pierced my chest, that she wasn't with The Son. She was with us. With her two children, with the memory of that afternoon, with the echo of our laughter in the fields. In her confused mind, she had managed the impossible: to merge us not into one, but into the very love she held for us.
She passed that night, peacefully. The nurse said she didn't suffer.
Now, months later, Marcos and I meet for lunch on Sundays. At first it was awkward. We were two ghosts who had taken turns inhabiting a concept, and now we didn't know how to be two again. Until one day, he brought a box of cookies. They were terrible, burnt at the edges. He had baked them himself.
"It was supposed to be my turn next week," he said, his voice breaking. "I was going to bring them to her."
We looked at each other and, for the first time in years, we didn't see a substitute, the administrator of a merciful lie. We saw the brother who had climbed the olive tree with me. We saw the two boys we'd been when she was young and strong and her love was an unbreakable wall against the world.
The guilt never fully left. The wear had changed us forever. But in the silence of that Sunday, breaking a bad cookie made with love, we understood. We hadn't shared an identity out of convenience. We had shared the weight of a farewell. And in that act of carrying the burden together, we had found, at the end of the road, not hypocrisy, but the purest echo of her love: that we were, and always would be, brothers.
The house of our childhood is empty now. But sometimes, when I walk past it, I swear I still hear, faintly, the creak of the door. And it's not a sad sound. It's the sound of a shift ending, and of a love that, in the end, needed no schedules to be infinite.

Poignant, touching! I love this, “ We hadn't shared an identity out of convenience. We had shared the weight of a farewell. And in that act of carrying the burden together, we had found, at the end of the road, not hypocrisy, but the purest echo of her love: that we were, and always would be, brothers.”
ReplyDeleteI really enjoyed reading this story. It was very touching, realistic, and touched my heart.
ReplyDeleteThis brief story has a good deal of emotional power. I enjoyed reading it.
ReplyDeleteThis story moved me so deeply. It captured the moment to moment of losing a parent and the broader perspective of loss. The writing was beautiful, real and I was engaged from the onset. The part that June Wolfman quoted was so well rendered. Thank you for this great story
ReplyDeleteVery melancholic, yet uplifting yarn about a child's insuperable love for their parent. Anyone who has witnessed the diminishing of their mother or father, wrought by age and dementia, can relate to this beautiful story, with its touching moments. Very well done!
ReplyDeleteYes. See mine, which you may already have heard.
DeleteI relate. Saw my mother who was hospitalized. Saw her and she was coherent. Got a call in the middle of the night, but it was not what I had feared. I was asked about her meds. the next call was the real thing. She had told me that she was in a brain study and I had to get her brain to OHSU when she was done with it. Later found out she had some lesions from some falls, but she had seemed rational to the end which was a great comfort. This is tough, but death is a part of life. I have many ghosts in my life and will be one myself in the near future. At least it is a way out of God's Waiting Room which I have been forced into. As usual, way too much about me. I very believable, personal story.
ReplyDeleteThank you for this story, Scardavino, which I found beautiful. It communicated so much emotion, was so incisive in its meditation on motherly love, around such an apparently simple plot. You aren't afraid to describe your characters' thoughts and emotions in detail, either, which is refreshing.
ReplyDeleteVery touching and beautiful ❤️
ReplyDeleteThis piece strikes without shouting. The story isn’t about death, but about loyalty: two brothers who, to care for their mother, invent a single child and share him as a rota and a refuge. The beauty lies in how the lie becomes true: in the end she wasn’t with the Son, she was with them, with the memory of the olive tree, with the laughter of childhood.
ReplyDeleteThe burnt biscuits are the perfect ending: clumsy, made with affection, and loaded with everything that cannot be said. That’s where brotherhood lives. There was no hypocrisy, only tired love. A shift closing, and a bond that remains.
I've read many stories about decline, forgetting, and farewells. But rarely has a narrative taken me to such a quiet, honest place as this one. Shared Time doesn't lean on easy drama or automatic tears; it dares to explore something harder — the subtle surrender one makes out of love, the decision to stop being someone in order to become what the other needs.
ReplyDeleteThe gesture of the brothers —erasing themselves for her, merging into a single son, sustaining the fiction out of love— struck me as a tenderness so fierce it's hard to put into words. This isn't a story about death, or loss, or memory. It's a story about the intimacy of care when there's nothing left to hope for, except the relief of doing no further harm.
What stays with me is the image of a shift ending, of that creaking door no longer sounding sad, but like the sound of a promise fulfilled. A bond that no longer needs names, faces, or schedules.
Thank you for writing something so human, so fragile, so true.
I agree with you completely. Every word.
DeleteA story you don’t just read — you hold.
ReplyDeleteBecause sometimes love means disappearing a little, so the other doesn’t feel alone.
Shared Time understands that with a tenderness that hurts. ❤
This story made me reflect on the futility of life, how quickly everything fades, and how the people we love will disappear, one by one, until all that remains is the echo of having loved them. And yet, here we are — and we must love one another with all our soul.
ReplyDelete