My stepdad always had this look about him, like he thought the whole world should orbit around his expectations. His shoulders were squared, his jaw stiff, and whenever he spoke, he had that clipped tone people use when they’ve convinced themselves they’re smarter than everyone else. He married my mom two years ago, and ever since, he’s treated her like she had been plucked straight from some 1950s advertisement: his housewife, his cook, his trophy.
At first, I thought he was just old-fashioned, maybe even clueless about how the world had changed. But it didn’t take long to realize he wasn’t ignorant—he was entitled. The real tipping point came one evening when my mom reheated some pasta from the night before.
It was creamy, garlicky, and still delicious the second time around. She plated it with care, sprinkling a little parmesan and parsley on top, as if to disguise the fact that it wasn’t made fresh. My stepdad sat down at the table, sniffed the air, and frowned.
“What’s this?” he asked. “Pasta alfredo,” my mom said, smiling nervously, as though bracing for impact. “From last night?”
“Well, yes, but—”
He didn’t even let her finish.
He pushed the plate away, the fork clattering. “I told you. I don’t eat the same meal twice.
A wife should cook a fresh meal every day.”
The words hung in the air like smoke after a firework. My mom’s face fell, and she looked at her lap. I saw her shoulders shrink, the way a balloon sags after the air escapes.
She mumbled something about fixing him something else, and he leaned back in his chair, satisfied, like a king whose decree had just been obeyed. I sat there fuming. Not because he refused to eat leftovers—lots of people don’t like them—but because of the way he said it, like my mom was his servant, like she owed him her time, her energy, her dignity.
I caught her eyes for a moment, and they looked watery, like she was trying to swallow her own humiliation. That night, I lay awake in bed, staring at the ceiling, replaying the scene. My mom had always been this vibrant, warm woman, the kind of person who laughed easily and hugged tightly.
Since she married him, though, she’d become quieter, careful, like someone who lived in a house filled with glass—afraid to touch or break anything. And I couldn’t stand it anymore. If he wanted a wife from the 1950s, then I’d give him a taste of what that really meant—not the fantasy he had in his head, but the grind and the absurdity of it.
He thought he was teaching my mom a lesson. I was going to teach him one. The next morning, I woke up earlier than usual.
My mom was already in the kitchen, scrambling eggs with a tired expression. My stepdad sat at the table, scrolling through his phone, waiting like a customer in a diner. “Morning,” I said, too brightly.
He grunted. I leaned against the counter, watching my mom cook, and an idea clicked into place. It would take some planning, some effort, but it was worth it.
Over the next few days, I quietly took control of the meals. I told my mom I’d help out, which she gratefully accepted. Cooking wasn’t foreign to me; I’d learned plenty growing up.
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