Parents disliked my hubby. After learning we were getting married, my mom told me not to call her. They had to talk to my spouse after we had kids.
With a house, kids, and money, they adjusted to him. Later, I discovered my mom is like him. My hubby is Rajan.
He’s silent, stubborn, and blunt. Raised in a one-bedroom home with four siblings and a hospital laundry-working mother. After arriving from Egypt, my parents constructed everything from scratch—engineering degrees, green cards, a four-bedroom house in a lush suburb outside Minneapolis.
They wanted me to marry a “respectable.” Person with a master’s, mortgage, and preferably a last name my mom can pronounce without tripping. Rajan was none of those. No degree, no savings, just a languid, confident pace through life like it owed him nothing.
My dad spoke little. Yet my mom? My mom examined him like a rubbish drawer—unwanted items.
She didn’t scream when I proposed. She just said, “Don’t call me when you regret it.” Then she hung up. A year and a half passed without talking.
Rajan never criticized her. I was quite annoyed by that. I was mad.
Hurt. But when she reached out after I had Alina, he urged me to meet her halfway. “I know what it’s like not having a mom around,” he remarked.
Don’t let pride win.”
So we saw them again. By bit. Sunday meals.
Over mashed potatoes, awkward smiles. Mum would say, “Well, at least he knows how to grill,” or “It’s lucky he got you.”
I squeezed his hand under the table. He shrugged and refilled her tea.
We had Sami, our second child, once they calmed down. Not warm, but polite. Dad would ask Rajan about employment.
I remember my mom sending biryani “for the kids.” We shared Thanksgiving last year. I believed the frost melted. Until three months ago.
It began when my cousin Hadiya called. She knows family news even when she shouldn’t. Her voice sounded strangely low.
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