My fiancé Dave and I planned every part of our wedding ourselves, refusing money from his rich parents.
When I mentioned I’d bake my own wedding cake, my mother-in-law mocked me.
But on the big day, she took credit for it in front of everyone.
She stole my spotlight… but karma was already baking its way back.
My mother-in-law, Christine, has never worked a day in her life and it shows in ways that make my teeth grind.
I first met her three years ago, and she’d assessed me like I was a questionable purchase.
“So you’re in… customer service?” she asked, somehow making it sound like I cleaned toilets for a living.
“I’m a marketing coordinator,” I corrected gently.
“How sweet. I suppose someone needs to do those jobs.”
Dave had squeezed my hand, offering a silent apology for his mother’s behavior. He held me close that night and whispered, “I love that you work hard and care about things that matter.”
That was the moment I knew I’d marry him someday.
Three months before our wedding, Dave’s company downsized, making him lose his job.
We were already stretching every dollar for the wedding, determined not to start our marriage in debt.
“We could ask my parents,” Dave suggested.
“Really?? Think again!”
He sighed, “God no! Mom would lord it over us for the next decade.”
“Then we cut back.
We make it work.”
“Yeah, we’ll do it our way. No debt, no guilt, no strings.”
“And no loans from your mom!”
He laughed. “Especially no loans from her!”
Then his eyes softened a little.
“This is why I love you, Alice. You never take the easy way out.”
That night, I came up with an idea. “I’ll bake our wedding cake myself.”
Dave propped himself up on one elbow.
“Are you sure? That’s a lot of pressure.”
“I’ve been baking since I was 10!” I reminded him. “Remember those cookies I used to sell in college?
People loved them.”
He smiled, “They did. And I love you for even considering it.”
“It’s decided then,” I said, feeling a flutter of excitement. “I’m making our wedding cake.”
The following Sunday, we had dinner at Dave’s parents’ sprawling house.
Jim, Dave’s father, was warm enough but distant, and lost in his business empire.
Christine, however, was impossible to ignore.
“We’ve finalized the menu with the caterer,” I mentioned over dessert, trying to include them in the planning. “And I’ve decided to bake the wedding cake myself.”
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