At her 60th birthday bash, my mother-in-law made my 6-year-old daughter eat dinner in the laundry room while the other kids got a fancy table. My heart broke, but nothing prepared me for what she announced to the entire party next. Tim and I have been married for over a decade.
We’ve weathered storms that would break most couples. Financial stress, job losses, family deaths… we’ve survived it all. We’ve been through unemployment, the grief of his dad’s passing, and a few near-breakups that somehow made us stronger.
His mother Eleanor? She’s been the tornado that never stops spinning. And I’ve been in her path since day one.
From day one, she made it clear I wasn’t good enough for her precious son. She gave me cold smiles at Christmas and backhanded compliments at family dinners. “Oh Kate, you look so much better with makeup on.” That sort of thing.
It was the kind of passive-aggressive warfare that leaves no visible wounds but cuts deep anyway. When our daughter, Ivy, came along six years ago, I foolishly hoped things would change. Tim calls her his lucky star.
He reads her bedtime stories in silly voices, builds pillow forts, and lets her paint his nails. He’s never once acted like Ivy was anything less than his world. Surely becoming a grandmother should’ve softened that icy heart of Eleanor’s.
I mean, how could you look at a newborn baby and not melt a little? But Eleanor didn’t. And what happened that night… it broke something in me.
Something I’m not sure can ever be fixed. “Do we really have to go?” I asked Tim that morning, watching him struggle with his tie in the mirror. The same tie he wore to every family function, like armor.
“It’s Mom’s 60th birthday, Kate. If we don’t show up, she’ll never let us hear the end of it.”
“And if we do show up?”
Tim’s hands stilled on his collar. He met my eyes in the reflection.
“She’ll probably find some other way to make us miserable. You ready?” he asked, adjusting his tie one final time. “We can’t be late for her big six-oh.”
I smoothed down Ivy’s dress and forced a smile.
“Ready as we’ll ever be.”
Some foolish part of me still thought maybe, just maybe, Eleanor would finally treat Ivy like family. After six years, maybe tonight would be different. Big mistake.
We showed up right on time. Ivy bounced in joy, clutching a handmade birthday card she’d spent hours decorating with glitter and heart stickers. “Grandma’s gonna LOVE this!” she beamed, her eyes sparkling with excitement.
My stomach twisted with that familiar dread. If only we knew what was coming. ***
Eleanor’s estate looked like something straight out of a magazine.
Every tree sparkled with twinkling lights. The valet parking made guests feel important. And the jazz quartet set the perfect mood on the patio.
She’d invited everyone, from distant cousins to college friends to even her yoga instructor. We stepped inside, and I immediately noticed the seating arrangement. The main dining room showcased an elegant table draped in white linen.
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