The room felt heavier than usual that day. Every step echoed louder, every voice seemed lower, as if even the walls understood what was coming. He sat quietly, hands still, eyes fixed on nothing in particular. There was no panic, no visible fear—just a strange calm that made everyone around him uneasy.
As the final hours approached, the officials followed the usual procedure, asking if he had any last request. It was a question they had asked many times before, often expecting something simple—food, a message, a moment of comfort. But this time, the answer wasn’t what anyone expected.
He paused before speaking, as if choosing his words carefully. “I just want to see my mother,” he said softly. The request hung in the air, heavier than anything said before. For a moment, no one moved. Some looked down, others exchanged glances, unsure how to respond. It wasn’t complicated, but it was deeply human.
Arrangements were made quickly. When she walked in, time seemed to slow down. She didn’t say anything at first—she just looked at him, her eyes filled with years of love, pain, and unanswered questions. He stood there, no longer the person everyone else saw, but simply a son in front of his mother.
In that moment, everything else faded. Titles, judgments, the situation itself—it all became distant. What remained was something simple and undeniable: even at the end, what people reach for most isn’t power or possessions… it’s connection. And that final request was a reminder that, no matter the circumstances, some bonds never lose their meaning.