Father Finds His Children Serving Family In Aprons At Party-heuh

I arrived at the family party and found my children serving tables in aprons; when I asked why they were being humiliated, my parents said, “That’s how they learn their place,” in front of everyone, and I felt something inside me finally break.

The first sound I heard was laughter.

Not birthday laughter.

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Not the sort that spills out when cousins are shouting over music, children are tearing across the grass, and someone has just knocked over a paper plate full of cake.

This laughter had an edge to it.

It was bright, hard, and pleased with itself.

It rose over the smell of grilled food, cut flowers, warm icing, damp coats, and the faint metallic click of serving tongs from the catering tables.

My keys were still cold in my palm.

I had barely stepped through the gate when my father’s voice carried across the garden.

“If Thomas couldn’t build a proper family like God intended,” he said, making sure the words travelled, “then at least his children can learn to serve people from a young age.”

For one second, my brain did what brains sometimes do when the truth is too ugly to let in at once.

It refused to name what I was looking at.

Rebecca was ten.

She was walking between the tables in a white apron, holding a stack of dirty plates so high they nearly touched her chin.

Her mouth was pressed into a thin little line.

Her eyes were red, but she was not crying.

That was worse.

Children cry when they feel safe enough to be comforted.

Rebecca looked like she had been told that tears would make things worse.

Samuel was eight.

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