At my retirement party, I expected kind words and polite farewells—not my daughter-in-law raising a glass and saying, “To the woman who taught me how not to raise a child.” Barbara smiled as she said it, but it cut through the backyard like a blade. Arthur, my son, stared at his drink, silent. The room went still. I hadn’t planned on speaking, but I wouldn’t let her have the final word.
I stood slowly, glass in hand. “Well,” I began, “since we’re giving toasts, I suppose it’s my turn. I saved my son’s life. Twice.” There were murmurs. Barbara’s smile twitched. “Three years ago,” I said, “Arthur showed up at my door with a bag and a busted lip. Said it was from ‘biting it too hard.’ I didn’t question it. I gave him a couch and a blanket.”
I saw the weight lift from him that night, even if briefly. The second time, he came back with no bruises—just silence. He told me about the spying, the blocked friends, the surveillance disguised as love. She called it ‘marital transparency.’ I called it control. I told him: go back, but this time, go with a plan.
And he did. A month ago, he filed for divorce.
Arthur stood beside me now, handing Barbara an envelope. “This time, I’m choosing peace,” he said. She opened it, face frozen.
Later, Arthur washed dishes in my kitchen. “She made me feel like I was never enough,” he said.
“You were,” I told him. “You just forgot.”
And now, he’s remembering.