His wife laughed hysterically. I smiled, left, and canceled the car loan I’d been paying for them. The next morning, his car was gone.
And Then
At my birthday dinner, my brother’s kid, Logan, threw my purse into the restaurant’s decorative pool and yelled, “Dad says you don’t deserve nice things!” His mother, my sister-in-law, Tessa, laughed so hard she cried. I just smiled, a thin, brittle expression that didn’t reach my eyes, and left. That night, from the quiet of my living room, I canceled the automatic payment for my brother’s car loan.
At 9:05 a.m. the next morning, a tow truck hauled his car out of his driveway. They had no idea that was just the beginning.
They ruined my birthday. All of them. My brother, Josh, his wife, Tessa, and their little monster of a son.
What was supposed to be a quiet dinner with family—the first time I’d treated myself to a nice meal in months—turned into a memory you try to bury so deep it feels like it happened to someone else. My name is Nicole. I’m 36, divorced, and raising my ten-year-old daughter, Hannah, on my own.
Life isn’t glamorous, but I’ve worked hard to keep things stable. I run a small marketing consultancy from my home, juggling clients and school runs, and I’m proud of the life I’ve built. That night, I just wanted one nice evening.
Instead, I was publicly humiliated by a child who has been taught that disrespect is a personality trait. We were at a restaurant I had booked a month in advance—an upscale place with outdoor seating, soft lighting, and a small, elegant pool at the center of the patio. My daughter, Hannah, sat beside me, dressed up and buzzing with excitement about the crème brûlée she’d been talking about for days.
Josh and Tessa arrived twenty minutes late, as usual. Logan, their eight-year-old, came in running, shouting about how he hated the place. Tessa offered me a fake, tight-lipped smile.
Josh barely mumbled hello before slumping into his chair and ordering a double whiskey. Logan climbed on chairs, stuck his fingers in the bread basket, and the only thing his parents said was a bored, “Go play.” No one else at the table—not my parents, not my cousins—said a word. They all stared at their drinks, making small talk, their eyes darting anywhere but at the chaos.
Everyone acted like this was normal, like we all just had to accept it because that’s who Josh married. Then the cake came out, a simple slice with a single candle, a complimentary gesture from the restaurant. After a polite, off-key “Happy Birthday,” I smiled, trying to keep the peace.
That’s when Logan came up behind me, snatched my new leather purse off the back of the chair, and sprinted toward the pool. He looked right at me, a malicious grin on his face, as if he’d been waiting for this moment, and shouted loud enough for the whole patio to hear, “Dad says you don’t deserve nice things!” Then he tossed my purse into the chlorinated water with a triumphant splash. A shocked silence fell over the other diners.
But at our table, Tessa started laughing. Not a little chuckle, but a full-throated, hysterical laugh, so hard she had to cover her face as tears streamed down her cheeks. Josh didn’t even blink.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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