A week before Christmas, I was in the kitchen of my little one-story home outside Portland, Oregon, making coffee and listening to the faint hum of traffic from the highway beyond the maple trees.
I heard voices coming from the living room.
It was Amanda, my daughter, on the phone. Her tone was casual, carefree, like she was planning a vacation to the Oregon coast or picking out a new dress at the mall. I walked toward the doorway slowly, without making a sound.
Something in her voice made me stop.
Then I heard her say, clearly:
“Just leave all eight grandkids with her to watch and that’s it. She doesn’t have anything else to do anyway. We’re going to the hotel and we’ll have a peaceful time.”
I felt as if the floor had opened up beneath my feet.
I froze behind the doorway, the mug still in my hand, the smell of fresh coffee rising like a cruel joke.
I tried to process what I had just heard. It wasn’t the first time I’d heard something like this, but never so direct, so cold, so completely without any consideration for me.
Amanda kept talking, even laughing.
“Yeah, Martin already booked the hotel on the coast. We’re going to take advantage of these days without the kids.
Robert and Lucy agree, too. They’re going to that resort they’ve always wanted to visit down in California. Mom has experience.
She knows how to handle all eight of them. Plus, she already bought the gifts and paid for dinner. We just have to show up on the 25th, eat, open presents, and that’s it.
Perfect.”
Perfect.
That word hung in the air like poison.
What happened next changed everything… FULL STORY on the next page.
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