My Son Charged Me £102,000 For A Wedding I Wasn’t Allowed To Attend-heuh

My son left me off the wedding guest list, then sent me a £102,000 bill for his wedding at Château Laurier.

He said, “You should be grateful I’m letting you contribute.”

I did not argue.

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I made one quiet decision.

My wife Margaret died on a Tuesday in February, and I remember the day more clearly than I remember some birthdays.

Tuesdays had belonged to us for thirty-one years.

Not in any grand way.

We were not the sort of couple who made a ceremony of everything.

It was just market day.

She would take the bags from under the sink, check the purse twice, and remind me that apples were not the same as biscuits, no matter how confidently I tried to argue.

After she died, Tuesdays kept coming.

That was the cruel part.

The calendar did not pause out of respect.

The kettle still clicked off in the kitchen.

The post still came through the letterbox.

The bins still had to go out, and the damp coats still hung in the narrow hallway as though she might come in and complain I had left mud on the mat.

For a while, I still drove to the farmers’ market.

I did not always buy anything.

Some mornings I sat at the far end of the car park, wrapped both hands round a coffee cup, and watched people carry flowers, bread, jars of honey, and paper bags of vegetables back to their cars.

They moved through the ordinary morning as if ordinary was nothing.

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