A Mother’s Day Dinner Insult Turned Pale When The Manager Returned-heuh

The restaurant was Megan’s idea.

That is the detail I kept returning to afterward, not because it mattered legally or financially, but because it showed intention.

Carol did not ask for a fancy dinner.

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I did not ask for one.

Derek, our son, did not plan it.

Megan picked the restaurant, made the reservation, sent me the address, and wrote, “Mother’s Day dinner, 6:30. Don’t be late.”

There was a smiling emoji at the end.

I remember staring at that emoji longer than a grown man should stare at anything on a phone.

It made the message feel friendly.

That was the trick.

Carol was excited from the moment I told her.

She tried not to show it too much, because she had learned over the years not to expect much from Derek on holidays.

Still, she took her pale blue blouse out of the closet that afternoon and laid it carefully across the bed.

It had tiny pearl buttons and soft sleeves that gathered at the wrist.

She wore it with black slacks and the silver earrings I gave her on our fifteenth anniversary.

The hallway smelled like lavender lotion and laundry detergent when she stood in front of the mirror, turning her head left and right to see if the earrings still caught the light.

“They still look nice?” she asked.

“They look better than they did in 2008,” I told her.

She laughed.

It was a small laugh, but it filled the hallway.

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