When my husband’s family decided I was their personal helper for Easter, they had no idea I’d already hidden something special alongside those chocolate bunnies. What happened next still makes me chuckle. I’m not one to share family drama online.
Honestly, I’m not. But what happened this Easter was too good not to tell. My name’s Nora, I’m 35, work as a marketing manager for a mid-sized company, and I’ve been married to Henry for three wonderful years.
Henry is everything I could want. He’s kind, supportive, funny, and even knows how to load the dishwasher right. Our life together has been nearly perfect, except for one big problem.
HIS FAMILY. “Nora, dear, could you grab me another mimosa while you’re up?” My mother-in-law Thelma’s voice carried across our backyard patio last month, though I’d barely taken two steps toward the kitchen. She hadn’t moved from her comfy lounge chair in over an hour.
I’m not someone who complains about everything. I don’t post vague, grumpy updates or vent on social media. But Henry’s mother and his three sisters, Lillian, Grace, and Violet, are… unique.
And by unique, I mean they act entitled. “Of course, Thelma,” I replied with the polite smile I’d mastered over three years of marriage. From the start, they made it clear I wasn’t what they pictured for Henry.
They’re the type who think they’re always right and have never fully accepted me. They give compliments that sting. “Oh, Nora, you’re so bold to wear something that fitted,” Lillian, the eldest at 41, said at our last family gathering, eyeing my perfectly normal dress.
Grace, 39, always comments on my food choices. “Good for you, not worrying about calories,” she’d say while I took a single bite of dessert. Then there’s Violet, 34, who, despite being younger, always sounds like a stern aunt.
“Our family has important traditions. Hope you can keep up.”
But this Easter? Oh, they really went too far.
“Since you and Henry don’t have kids yet,” Grace announced three weeks before Easter while her three children climbed over my freshly cleaned furniture, “it makes sense for you to plan the Easter Egg Hunt.”
Not just hide a few plastic eggs. No. I was expected to create a whole event: scavenger hunt clues, costumes, and even hire a bunny mascot with my own money.
“It would really show you care about our family,” Lillian added, sipping her coffee and adjusting her big sunglasses while lounging on my patio. Henry squeezed my hand under the table. “That sounds like a lot of work,” he began, but his sisters talked over him.
“It’s just what we do in this family,” Violet shrugged, though I’d never seen her lift a finger to plan anything. Fine. I held back my complaints.
For now. They didn’t know I’d already started planning something that would make this Easter unforgettable. Two days before Easter, my phone buzzed with a text.
Thelma had made a family group chat. Without Henry, naturally. “Since you’re already helping, dear, it would be LOVELY if you cooked Easter dinner!
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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