I was the one who showed them to their seats.
Not because I still worked the floor full-time. I didn’t. By then, I was thirty-two, dressed in a navy blazer instead of a server’s apron, holding a reservation tablet instead of a coffee pot.
But I still spent weekends at Alder & Reed in downtown Milwaukee because, two years earlier, I had invested in the business alongside the owner who had first hired me when I was nineteen, broke, and surviving on leftover dinner rolls between shifts.
My mother didn’t know that.
Or maybe she never cared enough to ask.
The reservation was under my younger sister’s name, Vanessa Clarke, party of four. Mother’s Day always brought chaos—overbooked tables, overpriced flowers, husbands pretending not to resent prix fixe menus, daughters posting mimosas online before taking a single sip. The dining room was packed, every booth filled, the patio lined with pink peonies and gleaming silverware.
I was checking the host stand when I glanced up and saw them entering.
My mother, Diane, in a pale yellow jacket and pearl earrings.
My sister Vanessa, polished and camera-ready in cream silk.
Vanessa’s husband, Trevor, carrying a gift bag.
And my mother’s friend Cheryl, wearing the expression of someone already anticipating other people’s discomfort.
For half a second, I considered slipping into the office and letting another host handle them.
But then my mother saw me.
She froze.
Vanessa followed her gaze, and her entire expression shifted—not quite surprise, but that tight, satisfied look she wore whenever life confirmed something she had quietly hoped for.
I smiled the way hospitality trains you to smile. Warm. Neutral.
Untouchable.
“Good morning,” I said. “Happy Mother’s Day. Table for four?”
My mother recovered first, making sure everyone within twenty feet could hear her.
“Oh,” she said with a light laugh.
“We didn’t realize you worked here. How embarrassing for us.”
She said it loudly enough for six tables to catch it.
A woman at a nearby banquette actually looked up from her orange juice.
Trevor stared down at the floor.
Cheryl smirked behind her sunglasses.
Vanessa adjusted her purse strap and stayed silent, which in my family counted as agreement.
I felt that familiar heat rise in my throat—the same mix of humiliation and anger that had followed me through most of my twenties. I had waited tables at Alder & Reed for four years while finishing my finance degree at night.
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