At 25, I built my own house, and at the housewarming party, my mother took me aside: “Son, give this house to your brother, and a room with us will be enough for you.” It seems she forgot how she threw me out on the street seven years ago. Her face twisted in h0rr0r when I answered loudly in front of everyone…

Marcus Langenfeld never knew a mother’s love. From childhood, he was treated as an inconvenience—unwanted, ignored, and pushed aside while his younger brother, Stefan, received every scrap of affection Irina had to offer. At seventeen, Marcus was told to leave their Dresden home and fend for himself. With nothing but a duffel bag and a lifetime of hurt, he worked brutal jobs by day and studied by night, using pain as fuel for ambition.

Years later, his perseverance paid off. Marcus built a successful construction firm in Rotterdam, married Amalia, and created the warm, loving family he never had. Meanwhile, Irina’s world crumbled. Stefan fell into alcoholism, money vanished, and their small apartment decayed around them. Desperate, Irina and Stefan arrived at Marcus’s home uninvited—demanding he give Stefan a house “because blood is blood.” Marcus refused, reminding them that he had been discarded without mercy.

From that moment, Marcus cut all ties. Irina and Stefan slipped further into poverty and regret, while Marcus prospered. Their paths crossed only by chance: at a supermarket, a medical clinic, and once through a café window. Each time Irina reached out—calling his name, begging to meet her grandchildren—Marcus walked away. He had no anger left, only distance.

At last, Irina understood what she had done. Sitting alone in her failing flat beside the son she had chosen, she whispered the truth she once denied: she had thrown away the best of her children. And Marcus, no longer a broken boy begging to belong, had learned to live without her.

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