Have you ever seen an old lady in a ratty nightgown, barefoot on a busy street, sobbing like the world’s ending? That’s how I first met Mrs. Patterson — or really, how she first “met” me, even if she forgot five minutes later.
I was 12, cutting through the neighborhood after school.
My stomach was growling because Mom’s diner shifts meant ramen again. There she was, three blocks from that fancy care facility her son had dumped her in.
She was shivering in the cold, mascara-streaked tears mixing with snot.
“Where’s my house? Tommy sold it! My Tommy wouldn’t do that!” she wailed, clutching a faded photo of some kid who looked nothing like the suit-wearing jerk who visited once a month.
I froze. Cars honked, people stared, but nobody stopped.
It was the fifth time this month I’d spotted her wandering, always the same route, always crying for the cozy bungalow her son had flipped and sold for a fat profit. My mom said she suffered from dementia. She keeps escaping, chasing ghosts.
“Hey, Mrs. P, it’s okay,” I said softly, slipping my hand into her cold, papery one. She flinched, then relaxed, eyes foggy but trusting. “I know the way home. Come on.”
We shuffled back to her old porch, that “SOLD” sign long gone, now some yuppie’s Airbnb.
“This is it, right? My roses… where’d they go?” she murmured, sinking onto the steps. I sat with her, sharing my peanut butter sandwich, listening to stories of “Tommy” building forts in the yard.
“Why do you keep coming back, little man?” she asked once, patting my knee.
“Dunno. Feels right,” I lied. Truth? Mom’s overtime couldn’t stop the eviction notice taped to our door. Home was a ticking bomb, but here? I could pretend.
I’d call the facility after she dozed off, then vanish before they arrived. She’d forget me by morning. Rinse, repeat.
Until her son showed up…
One afternoon, as the sun dipped low and painted the empty porch gold, I rounded the corner with Mrs. P clinging to my arm, humming an old tune about apple pies. That’s when I saw him: a man in a crisp suit, arms crossed, pacing like a storm cloud. He had an expensive watch and polished shoes.
Mrs. Patterson’s son, Michael.
“You’re the kid,” he barked as we approached, eyes narrowing. “Facility’s been buzzing. Some boy’s returning her every time she slips out. You need to stop. You’re confusing her — making it worse!”
She gripped my hand tighter, shrinking behind me. “My boy,” she whispered, peering at me, not him. Her real son flinched like I’d slapped him.
“She is confused,” I shot back, voice steady despite my pounding heart. “That’s why she wanders. Chasing what you took away. I just bring her back here — where she feels safe.”
“Safe?” Michael laughed bitterly, running a hand through his perfect hair. “This isn’t her home anymore. I had to sell it. Her care costs a fortune.”
Mrs. P tugged my sleeve. “Tell Tommy to come inside, dear. Dinner’s ready.”
Her eyes sparkled with a memory that wasn’t mine.
Michael’s face crumpled for a split second before hardening. “See? You’re just prolonging it.” He stormed off, but I swear I heard his voice crack.
Three days later, knuckles rapped on our apartment door — loud, insistent. Mom was at work; my little sister hid in her room. I opened it to him, suit rumpled now, holding a coffee like it was a lifeline.
“My mother’s deteriorating faster because of this routine,” he said, stepping inside without asking. Our place was a wreck: a half-empty fridge humming, eviction notice glaring from the kitchen table. “She remembers you. Calls for ‘the porch boy’ in her sleep. How? How did you get her to trust you when her own son’s a stranger?”
I shrugged, throat tight. “I just… walked her home. Listened. Shared my sandwich.”
“To a house that isn’t hers.” His gaze flicked to the notice. “Eviction?”
“Yeah. Mom’s killing herself at the diner.”
He sank onto our sagging couch, head in hands. Silence stretched, heavy. Then: “Truth? I couldn’t sell Mom’s house. Couldn’t gut it. It’s been sitting empty — I’m drowning in two mortgages, paying for her facility and that ghost.”
I stared. “So why not let her live there?”
“Too risky. She wanders.” He looked up, eyes raw. “Your family can rent it. Below market. Stable place for you kids. One condition: you visit her twice a week. Not to walk her home…just sit on the porch. Talk. Be her ‘porch boy.’ Even if she forgets by morning.”
My jaw dropped. Was this a trap? A fix? Or guilt talking?
Six months flew by in a whirlwind I never saw coming. We moved into Mrs. P’s old bungalow that very week—creaky floors, overgrown roses blooming again under Mom’s green thumb.
No more eviction nightmares; Mom quit one job, sobbing tears of relief into my hair that first night. “Ethan, you saved us,” she whispered, hugging me so tight I couldn’t breathe. But it wasn’t me. It was her—Mrs. Patterson—who’d wandered into our lives.
Now, every Tuesday and Thursday, Michael picks me up in his sleek SUV. No suit anymore; jeans and a hoodie, like he’s finally off the clock. We drive to the facility together; the silence is at first awkward, thick with unspoken things. He’d grill me: “What do you say to her? How do you not get frustrated when she blanks?”
“Just be there,” I’d mutter. “Like you are now.”
Mrs. P doesn’t always know me. Some days, her eyes glaze over mid-sentence. “Who are you, boy? Where’s Tommy?” But when I take her hand — soft, veined like autumn leaves — she squeezes back, every time. A spark.
Michael watches from the armchair across, not interrupting anymore. He’s learning: no fixing her, no pleading “It’s me, Mom!” Just presence. He’d bring her favorite lemon cookies; I’d spin tales of the porch forts she’d half-remember.
One rainy Thursday, things cracked wide open. She lit up, grabbing both our hands. “My boys! Both here. Sit…tell me about the roses.” Michael froze, tears welling. I nodded him on.
“They’re blooming, Mom. Because of Ethan,” he said, voice thick.
She beamed at us, memory flickering like a candle.
After, in the parking lot, rain drumming the windshield, he turned to me. Suspense hung — he’d been distant lately, phone calls terse. Was he backing out? Raising rent?
“Thank you,” Michael said finally, gripping the wheel.
I blinked. “For what? Renting your ghost house?”
He laughed, a broken sound. “For teaching me that loving someone with dementia means meeting them where they are. Not where you wish they’d stay.”
Chills hit me.
I never knew the “real” Mrs. P, the sharp-witted one, before the fog. But I loved the wanderer — the crying lady in the nightgown, searching for home. Because sometimes, home isn’t bricks and a deed.
It’s the hand that squeezes back, seeing you when the world fades. She helped me find stability; I helped Michael find his mom again. And in those porch-boy visits? We all found family.