PART 1 — THE DINNER WHERE SHE CALLED ME A LEECH
Get a job and stop being a leech,” my daughter-in-law shouted in the middle of the family dinner.
Chapter 1
PART 1 — THE DINNER WHERE SHE CALLED ME A LEECH
Get a job and stop being a leech,” my daughter-in-law shouted in the middle of the family dinner.
I burst out laughing.
What she didn’t know was that I was worth $5 million. So I simply replied,
“Sweetheart, find yourself a new place to live. I’m glad to have you here. Follow my story until the end and comment the city you’re watching from so I can see how far my story has reached.”
My name is Eileene, and for 3 years I’ve been living a lie. Not the kind of lie you tell others, but the kind you tell yourself when you need to discover who people really are when they think you have nothing left to offer.
The dinner invitation came on a Tuesday morning. Darren’s voice sounded strained over the phone, the way it always did when Thalia was listening in the background.
“Mom, would you like to come over for dinner Friday night? Thalia’s making her famous lasagna.”
Famous? I almost laughed. The woman
could barely boil water without burning it, but I’d learned to bite my tongue over the years.
“That sounds lovely, sweetheart. What time?”
“7:30. And Mom…”
He paused, and I could practically hear Thalia’s sharp whisper in the background.
“Maybe dress a little nicer this time. You know how Thalia likes things to look. Presentable.”
Presentable.
I stared at my reflection in the hallway mirror after hanging up. Gray hair pulled back in a simple bun, no makeup, wearing the same faded cardigan I’d worn to their house a dozen times before. For three years, this had been my uniform. The grieving widow, struggling to make ends meet in her small apartment, dependent on her son’s occasional generosity.
Friday evening arrived with the kind of October chill that cuts right through you. I walked the six blocks to their house, the same route I’d taken countless times since Harold passed.
The house looked exactly as it had when I’d bought it for them as a wedding gift seven years ago. Not that they knew that, of course.
Darren opened the door with that forced smile he’d perfected.
“Hi, Mom. Come in. Come in.”
He gave me a quick hug, the kind that felt obligatory rather than genuine. At 34, my son had grown into a man I barely recognized sometimes. Still handsome, still my boy. But there was something hollow in his eyes that hadn’t been there before his marriage.
“Eene.”
Thalia’s voice cut through the warm air like a blade.
She appeared in the doorway to the dining room, her platinum blonde hair perfectly styled, wearing a dress that probably cost more than most people’s monthly rent. At 29, she had the kind of aggressive beauty that demanded attention and respect, even when she’d done nothing to earn either.
“Hello, Thalia. Thank you for having me.”
She looked me up and down with barely concealed disgust.
“Of course. Family dinner and all that.”
The dining room was set with their best china, the kind reserved for guests who mattered. I noticed immediately that while Darren and Thalia had matching place settings, mine was different. Older plates, a mismatched glass, a fork with a slight bend in one of the tines. Small details that spoke volumes about how I was viewed in this house.
“Mom, sit here.”
Darren gestured to the chair at the far end of the table, the one that put me furthest from both of them. I took my seat without comment, folding my hands in my lap as Thalia served the lasagna with theatrical flourishes.
“I hope you like it,” she said, though her tone suggested she couldn’t care less whether I did or not. “It’s an old family recipe, my grandmother’s.”
I took a bite. It was mediocre at best, oversalted and undercooked in places.
“It’s delicious,” I said anyway.
The conversation limped along for the first 20 minutes. Darren talked about his job at the marketing firm, careful to avoid mentioning the promotion he’d been passed over for again. Thalia dominated most of the discussion, talking about her yoga classes, her shopping trips, her plans to redecorate the living room.
“We’re thinking of getting new furniture,” she announced, cutting her lasagna into precise little squares. “Something more modern. The stuff we have now is so outdated.”
I remembered picking out that furniture with them when they’d first moved in. Thalia had loved it then, gushed about how perfect it was, but that was before she’d decided that everything in her life, including her husband’s mother, needed an upgrade.
“That sounds expensive,” I said mildly.
Thalia’s eyes flashed.
“Well, some people prioritize making their homes beautiful. Some people understand that you have to invest in quality.”
The barb was clear. I was neither beautiful nor quality and certainly not worth investing in. I took another bite of the terrible lasagna and said nothing.
“Actually, Mom,” Darren began, and I could hear the reluctance in his voice. “We wanted to talk to you about something.”
I set down my fork and waited.
Thalia leaned forward, her expression shifting into what she probably thought was concern.
“Eileen, we’ve been worried about you, living alone in that tiny apartment, struggling to make ends meet. It’s been 3 years since Harold passed, and you’re still not getting back on your feet.”
“I’m managing fine,” I said quietly.
“Are you, though?”
Thalia’s voice took on that patronizing tone she used when she wanted to sound reasonable while delivering a blow.
“You can barely afford your rent. You shop at thrift stores. You don’t even have a car anymore.”
All true from their perspective. What they didn’t know was that every choice had been deliberate. The small apartment was paid in cash. The thrift store clothes were a costume. The lack of a car was because I preferred to walk, not because I couldn’t afford one.
“I get by,” I said.
“Getting by isn’t living, Mom,” Darren said.
And for a moment, I heard genuine concern in his voice. It gave me hope that somewhere underneath Thalia’s influence, my real son still existed.
But then Thalia took over again.
“The thing is, Eileen, we can’t keep helping you forever. Darren works hard for his money, and we have our own future to think about. We want to start a family soon, and we need to be practical.”
I looked at my son, waiting for him to contradict her, to remind her that their help consisted of occasional dinners and birthday cards. He said nothing.
Thalia continued, emboldened by his silence.
“What we’re trying to say is, maybe it’s time you thought about getting a job. You’re only 64. Lots of people your age work. Walmart is always hiring greeters.”
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