When My Aunt Shamed Mum, Dad’s Three-Second Silence Changed Everything-Teptep

My mother was humiliated by my aunt in front of everyone.

My father was silent for three seconds, then took out the car keys and handed them to my mother: “Wife, it seems these relatives aren’t going anymore, let’s go home.”

People think cruelty always arrives shouting.

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In my family, it usually arrived smiling.

It came with a soft laugh, a tilted head, a sentence beginning with, “I’m only saying this because I care.”

It came across dinner tables, over bowls of soup and plates of fish, while everyone pretended not to notice the person being cut open in front of them.

That evening was my grandmother’s 70th birthday.

My uncle, Su Qiang, had booked the largest private room at a newly opened Chinese restaurant in the city.

The place was trying very hard to look grand.

There were bright chandeliers, polished doors, thick carpet and a long table dressed in white cloth.

Outside the room, you could hear the ordinary noise of a busy restaurant: plates stacked, waiters calling softly to one another, the dull clink of glass.

Inside, everything looked warm and expensive.

Everything except us.

My father, Chen Jian Guo, sat with his shoulders slightly hunched, as if he wanted to take up less space.

He was a technician, the sort of man who could fix almost anything mechanical but never knew what to do with a room full of people judging him.

He had come straight from work.

His shirt collar was neat but tired.

There was a faint mark near one cuff that no amount of washing seemed to remove.

Under the table, he kept one foot pressed against the gift bag we had brought, nudging it further back whenever anyone glanced down.

My mother, Su Yu Hua, noticed.

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