I prepared Christmas dinner for my son and daughter-in-law.
I gave him a new car and her a designer purse.
When it was their turn to give a gift, he said, “My wife told me to teach you a lesson, so no gifts.”
My daughter-in-law just stood there, smiling.
I pulled an envelope out of my bag.
“Perfect,” I said. “Then I have one more gift for you both.”
My wife told me to teach you a lesson, so no gifts.
My son’s words echoed through the dining room while I held the keys to the brand-new car I had just gifted him. Olivia, my daughter-in-law, stood by his side with that poisonous smile I will never forget. I had just prepared the perfect Christmas dinner. I had just handed him a car that cost me years of savings. I had just given her a designer purse worth over $1,500.
And this was what I received in return.
Humiliation. Contempt. Betrayal.
But what they did not know was that I had prepared something else. I pulled a manila envelope from my handbag, smiled calmly, and said:
“Perfect. Then I have an extra gift for you both.”
In that moment, my life changed forever.
Let us go back three months.
My name is Eleanor. I am sixty-six years old. For my entire life, I believed that being a good mother was enough, that sacrifices would always be valued, that unconditional love was reciprocal. I had lived alone since my husband died seven years ago, in a modest house, but one full of memories and photographs of William, my only son.
After becoming a widow, I worked as a seamstress until I retired two years ago. Every dollar I earned was with him in mind. William was my pride, my reason for existing. When he married Olivia three years ago, I thought I would finally have the complete family I always dreamed of.
At first, Olivia seemed perfect—educated, smiling, always with kind words. She would come to visit me with William, help me in the kitchen, praise my recipes. I was happy, excited about having a daughter-in-law, about the possibility of having grandchildren one day.
But, as the saying goes, not all that glitters is gold—and Olivia glittered too much.
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