My brother Jacob was finally getting married, and he had only requested two speeches: one from me, and one from our grandmother. Our mom had passed away when he was just seven, and although Dad eventually remarried a woman named Linda, it was really Grandma who stepped in to raise us. She was the one packing our school lunches, sewing my prom dress, and showing up at every game, recital, and event.
Linda resented that. She mocked Grandma constantly, even nicknaming her “mothballs” behind her back. The wedding had gone smoothly until the toasts began.
Mine went well, then Grandma stood, her hand shaking slightly as she lifted her glass. She pulled out the small notebook where she had written her speech. That’s when Linda snorted loudly and blurted out, “OH, WHO LET THE JANITOR IN EARLY?
SORRY, GRANDMA, YOUR CLEANING SHIFT STARTS AFTER DINNER.”
The room froze in stunned silence. Grandma lowered her glass, while Linda giggled and said, “Relax, I’m just joking. You’re all way too sensitive.” But the damage was already done.
Jacob’s jaw tightened as he took the microphone. “I wasn’t going to…” he started, scanning the guests as though weighing his next words. Grandma stood motionless, her lips pressed tight, eyes glistening but refusing to spill tears.
Meanwhile, Linda sat with a smug grin, expecting laughter that never came. Jacob’s voice steadied. “I wasn’t planning on saying this today.
I thought it was better to just keep things light. But Linda, since you mentioned cleaning…” He paused. “Maybe it’s time everyone knew what Grandma actually cleaned up.”
A gasp rippled through the crowd.
My stomach twisted, my throat went dry. I didn’t know exactly where he was heading, but I could tell it wouldn’t be gentle. “She didn’t just raise us,” Jacob said firmly.
“She protected us. From you.”
Linda gave a sharp laugh. “Oh, come on.
What is this—group therapy?”
Grandma quietly sat back down, her little notebook clutched tightly in her lap. Jacob’s voice remained steady. “I was nine when you came into our lives, acting all sweet and cheerful.
Dad was grieving, trying to hold things together after Mom. And Grandma was the one really doing the work—bedtimes, school runs, comforting us when we cried. But you?
You treated Grandma like a servant. And you treated me like I didn’t matter.”
The room was silent. “You would ‘forget’ to pick me up from practice.
You’d tell Dad I was being difficult when all I wanted was help with homework. You told Grandma she was too old to be raising kids. And when I turned twelve, you demanded I call you Mom.
When I didn’t, you told me real mothers don’t die. Real mothers stay.”
Even the DJ looked ready to crawl away. “I never told Dad, because he was lost in his own grief.
But Grandma knew. She showed up with lunches when Linda didn’t. She bought me a jacket when Linda claimed we couldn’t afford it—while she got her nails done at the salon every week.”
Linda’s face turned pale.
She tried to get up, but her heel caught in the carpet and she nearly stumbled. Nobody moved to help her. Jacob raised his glass.
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