Jeremy accepted the offer because he was desperate. His own mother was sick, bills were piling up, and every paycheck disappeared before it could help enough. So when a wealthy man offered him five hundred dollars a week to visit his mother in a nursing home and pretend to be her son, Jeremy knew it was wrong. But he also knew his mother needed medicine, food, and care he could barely afford.
The elderly woman’s name was Rosie. She had dementia, and on some days she believed Jeremy was really her son, Tim. At first, Jeremy told himself it was only a job. He would visit on weekends, bring flowers, sit with her for an hour, and leave. But Rosie did not treat him like a stranger. She held his hand, worried about whether he had eaten, and spoke to him with a tenderness he had not felt in years.
Week after week, the lie became harder to carry. Rosie began waiting for him by the window, calling him “Timmy” with a smile that made Jeremy feel ashamed and comforted at the same time. He had been paid to give her a false sense of love, but somehow she gave him something real in return. For a little while, he was not just a tired delivery driver drowning in debt. He was someone’s son, someone’s comfort, someone’s reason to smile.
After Rosie passed away, Jeremy thought the arrangement was finally over. Then the nursing home director pulled him aside and said Rosie had left one last request for him. She had known more than anyone realized. In her clearer moments, she understood he was not Tim, but she had still asked for him because he showed up when her real family would not. Her final wish was simple, but it broke him open. She wanted Jeremy to visit his own mother more often, while there was still time.
