PART 1
By 6:18 that Tuesday evening, winter had already wrapped itself around our quiet cul-de-sac. Porch lights glowed through the cold blue air, and the little plastic snowman two houses away leaned in the wind.
Inside my kitchen, everything felt warm and familiar. Chicken was heating in the oven, lemon cleaner still scented the counters, and a chocolate silk pie cooled on the stove because my grandchildren still believed Christmas should taste like my house.
Then Tiffany walked in.
She did not enter like a guest. She came in like someone who had already decided my home partly belonged to her
“I’m so glad you’re already getting ready,” she said.
I looked at her. “Getting ready for what?”
She sat at my kitchen counter and began naming people. Her sister. Her sister’s An uncle. Cousins. A niece. Two friends who “had nowhere warm to go.”
Then she smiled.
My whole is having Christmas here,” she said. “It’s only twenty-five people.”
Only.
That single word told me everything.
Twenty-five people meant three turkeys, endless dishes, extra chairs, crowded counters, children running everywhere, and me hidden in the background with a serving spoon in my hand while Tiffany smiled for photos.
So I folded the dish towel in my hands and said quietly, “You didn’t ask me. You announced it. So you host.”
Tiffany’s smile faded.
“Kevin won’t allow this,” she said.
I almost laughed.
This was my house. I had paid the mortgage for over thirty years. I had buried my husband, raised my children, fixed problems no one saw, and built a home my grandchildren loved.
And now this woman was standing in my kitchen, telling me my son had to approve my refusal.
Before I could answer, Kevin came in from work.
Tiffany rushed to him immediately.
“Your mother is refusing to help,” she said.
Kevin rubbed his forehead. “Mom. It’s the holidays.”
I looked at him and said, “I’m not refusing Christmas. I’m refusing to be volunteered.”
Tiffany crossed her arms. “We can’t afford catering. Everything is booked. I already told everyone it was handled.”
Then Kevin looked away.
“The apartment deposit wiped out our savings,” he muttered.
Apartment deposit?
No one had told me anything about a new apartment. Yet somehow, I had been silently assigned the job of fixing the problem.
I looked at both of them.
“Then you should not have invited twenty-five people to someone else’s home.”
No one spoke.
Finally, Tiffany said coldly, “Fine. We’ll see.”
That night, after they went upstairs, I cleaned the kitchen, covered the pie, turned off the oven, and opened my laptop.
Then I pulled out the blue folder I had been keeping for three weeks.
CONTINUE READING