I opened the door, and Garrison didn’t ask how I was or whether I needed anything after the storm.
He simply said, “Get your snowblower ready because we have places to be.”
I looked past him and saw my daughter sitting in the truck without even getting out.
For the first time in eleven years, I answered, “No.”
He stared at me as if I had spoken another language.
“I’ve cleared your driveway every winter while you forgot I existed the rest of the year,” I said quietly.
“I’m done.”
His face turned red as he accused me of being selfish and reminded me that family should always help each other.
I smiled sadly and told him that family also visits when the weather is warm, calls on birthdays, and checks on widowed mothers without needing something first.
He stormed back to his truck, spun the tires in the snow, and left without another word.
By afternoon, a neighbor with a tractor helped them after hearing they were stranded, but the whole town also heard why I had refused.
A week later, my daughter came alone with tears in her eyes and admitted she had let Garrison take me for granted because it was easier than standing up to him.
She apologized for every missed holiday, every ignored phone call, and every winter they treated me like free equipment instead of family.
I forgave her, but I made one thing clear.
“If you come here again, come because you want to see me—not because the driveway needs clearing.”
The next snowfall arrived two weeks later.
This time there was no knock before sunrise.
Instead, my daughter arrived in the afternoon carrying homemade soup, and after we shared lunch together, she asked if we could clear the driveway side by side.
For the first time in eleven winters, I wasn’t just clearing snow.
I was finally clearing away the silence that had settled between us for far too long.