At my future daughter-in-law’s bridal shower, I expected awkward small talk and polite smiles. I did not expect to leave questioning whether my son really knew the woman he was about to marry.
His father died when Daniel was eight. One day I was a wife and mother, and the next I was a widow trying to keep the lights on and my boy fed.
I took the first steady job I could get.
Janitorial work. Schools, office buildings, clinics, anywhere that needed floors scrubbed and trash emptied.
So when he called me six months ago and said, “Mom, I’m going to ask Emily to marry me,” I cried right there over a bucket of floor cleaner.
Emily had always been polite to me. Never warm, though.
She’d always make snide comments at me, questioning when I’d “move up in life.” It was clear she thought she was much better than me. But family is complex, and I thought we could work through things when I got an invitation to her bridal shower.
I should have second guessed that invite the moment I opened it.
As I arrived at the shower, Emily stood near a balloon arch in a pale pink dress.
She looked at me, scowled slughtly, and said, “Oh. You made it.”
“I wouldn’t miss it,” I said, holding out the gift bag.
She took it with two fingers.
“Hmm. Yeah.”
That was it.
No hug. No ‘thank you.’ No ‘you look nice.’
Then Emily stood up and clapped her hands.
“Okay, ladies,” she said brightly.
“Before we eat, we’re doing something fun.”
Then she picked up a full glass from the table beside her, turned, and let it slip from her fingers.
It smashed on the floor.
The room went quiet.
Then Emily looked right at me.
Not at the host. Not at the hall staff. Me.
She bent, grabbed a mop from beside the catering station, and walked it over like this had all been planned.
Then she held it out to me with a smile.
“Since you didn’t contribute much,” she said, sweet as sugar, “you can at least earn your meal.
You should be used to this, anyway.”
I froze. Someone coughed awkwardly, but beyond that, you could hear a pin drop.
I could feel every face in that room on me.
Emily tilted the mop a little closer. “Go on.”
I looked at her.
Really looked at her.
And I saw it.
Not awkwardness.
Not nerves. Not stress.
Enjoyment.
She was enjoying this.
That was the moment something in me went cold.
I didn’t take the mop.
I set my purse on the table instead, opened it, and reached inside.
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