I told him, “No. You did.”
He shook his head. “No, Mom. I just walked through the door. You built the house.”
Then he met Chloe.
“Oh, you still teach middle school? That must be… rewarding.”
“Mark says you love your little house. That’s so nice.”
“We should find something simple for you to wear to the engagement party. You probably don’t want to feel overdressed.”
Then she glanced at me.
I told myself I was imagining it. I told myself rich girls probably just talked differently. I told myself the important thing was that my son seemed happy.
But there were cracks.
A few months before the wedding, Chloe was talking budgets with her mother in front of me and laughing about floral costs.
She waved one hand and said, “Honestly, the rehearsal dinner alone costs more than some people live on for a year.”
Then she glanced at me. Just for a second. Long enough.
Then came the rehearsal dinner.
Mark heard it.
“Chloe,” he said, flat.
She gave that airy laugh of hers. “What? I meant people in general.”
Later, in the parking lot, I told him, “You don’t need to fight my battles.”
His jaw tightened. “Maybe I should start.”
Then came the rehearsal dinner.
Then she started talking about how “different” their families were.
It was at a country club so grand it looked staged. Chandeliers. Marble floors. Giant flower arrangements that probably cost more than my mortgage payment. I stood in the bathroom before dinner started and looked at myself in the mirror, smoothing my dress like that might make me belong there.
“You can do one night,” I told my reflection.
At first, people laughed. She teased Mark for being serious. Teased his work hours. Then she started talking about how “different” their families were.
A few people shifted in their seats.
“My parents always worried I was too spoiled,” she said, laughing. “Then I met Mark, and I realized some people really do know how to live on almost nothing.”
A few people shifted in their seats.
Chloe kept going.
“I mean, when we first talked wedding numbers, I almost died when I found out his mom has been teaching middle school for so long. On about 45 grand a year?” She laughed into the microphone. “My seasonal wardrobe costs more than that.”
But Chloe was drunk enough now not to hear warning when it came.
This time the laughter was scattered. Thin. Embarrassed.
Her mother said, very softly, “Chloe.”
But Chloe was drunk enough now not to hear warning when it came.
She turned and looked right at me.
“It’s honestly kind of adorable,” she said, “how some people still live like that and act like it’s noble.”
Mark stood.
Whatever it was, her face changed.
He did not look angry. That would have been easier.
He looked finished.
Chloe gave a nervous laugh. “Babe, relax. I’m joking.”
He said nothing.
He leaned toward Chloe and said something so quietly I could not hear it.
Whatever it was, her face changed.
He picked up the microphone and looked around the room.
“Mark,” she whispered. “Don’t.”
He picked up the microphone and looked around the room.
“I’ve listened long enough tonight,” he said. “And I need to say something clearly.”
Nobody moved.
He turned to me first.
“My mother spent her whole life giving. She gave her time, her energy, her weekends, her peace, and every extra dollar she had so I could stand in rooms like this one.”
He set the microphone back on its stand.
I could not breathe.
“She never needed a family name or a club membership to matter. She has more class in one morning before work than this room has shown her all night.”
Chloe tried to cut in. “Mark, stop making this-“
He ignored her. He looked at her parents, then at everyone else.
“Wealth is not character. And contempt is not sophistication. If anyone here confused those things, I hope tonight clears it up.”
The room went still in that awful, total way.
Then he came to me and held out his hand.
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