He Paid For Mum’s 70th, Then His Children Were Sent Away-heuh

I paid for my mother’s seventieth birthday party, and in front of the whole family, they sent my children to sit next to the potted plants.

“That’s how they learn their place,” my father said.

I did not shout.

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I did not throw a glass.

I asked for the invoice, took the pen, and signed one change nobody in that room had expected.

By the end of the night, the party my family had been showing off as proof of their good taste had started to reveal exactly who had been paying for their pride.

My daughter Emily was eight years old that evening.

She had chosen her dress herself, a soft blue one with a little cardigan because the weather had turned damp and cold by late afternoon.

My son Noah was six, and he had spent most of the morning at the kitchen table making a birthday card for his grandmother.

He drew a cake with too many candles, then carefully coloured every flame purple because he said purple looked “fancy”.

Sarah, my wife, made him slow down with the glue because he was so excited he nearly stuck the card to the tea towel.

I remember the kettle clicking off.

I remember Sarah glancing at me over her mug.

“You know they’ll find a way to make you feel small tonight,” she said.

I sighed because I was tired of having the same conversation.

“They’re my family.”

“That doesn’t answer what I said.”

She was right, of course.

Sarah was often right about things I did not want to see.

I had spent years telling myself my parents depended on me because I was reliable.

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