When I asked about the date of my son’s wedding, my daughter-in-law said: “We got married yesterday. Just for special people.” A week later she called: “The rent is overdue! Did you transfer it?” I replied: “Didn’t I tell you?”

24

When my daughter-in-law told me I wasn’t “special people,” I was standing in my little Phoenix kitchen, halfway between the fridge with the faded American flag magnet and the sink full of breakfast dishes. The Arizona sun was bouncing off the neighbor’s pickup, Sinatra was crooning low from the old radio, and my glass of iced tea was sweating a ring onto the table. I had the phone in my hand, ready to ask my son Max a simple question: “So, when’s the big day?”

Instead, Lena lifted her eyes to mine, smiled that chilly little smile, and said, “Oh, we already got married yesterday.

We only invited special people.”

I heard the words, but my brain refused to file them under “real.” For three years, I’d paid their $500 rent every month, filled their fridge, bought their furniture, covered their “emergencies.” Yet somehow, I wasn’t special people. I stared at the flag magnet on my fridge—red, white, and blue gone a little dull with time—and realized I had never felt smaller in my own country or my own home. I didn’t know it yet, but that sentence would end with lawyers at my dining table, police on my porch, and a judge deciding whether I was crazy… or just done being used.

Max wouldn’t quite look at me. He sat hunched on my couch—the couch I’d bought for their first apartment—thumb rubbing the seam of his jeans like he wanted to disappear into them. Lena tucked her legs under herself, perfectly at home, as if my living room were just an extension of theirs.

“Mom,” Max finally said, voice oddly flat, “it was super small. Just us and a couple witnesses. We didn’t want to make a big deal out of it.”

I could have believed him, once.

I wanted to. But my phone buzzed in my hand, and like a fool, I glanced at it. A tag on social media.

There they were—Max and Lena—in front of a white wooden arch wrapped in flowers, grinning at each other. Her in a lace dress I recognized from a picture she’d sent me weeks ago. His arm around her shoulders, her parents flanking them, glasses of champagne lifted high.

Behind them, her sister, her brother, her cousins. A whole crowd of “special people.”

I zoomed in like that would somehow change the guest list. It didn’t.

I wasn’t in a single frame. The only thing of mine in those pictures was the money. “Intimate, huh?” I heard myself say.

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