When Sydney got married, I funded the entire wedding. Later, I arranged a rental home for her and Grant at a heavily reduced rate.
I never talked about these things—but over time, I realized something had changed.
They no longer saw my help as generosity.
They saw it as something they were entitled to.
Macy, on the other hand, was nothing like them. She worked as a preschool teacher—kind, gentle, grounded. From the beginning, my mother and sister treated her as if she were beneath us because of her simple background.
They made subtle remarks about her clothes, her quiet nature, her way of speaking.
When she became pregnant, it only got worse. Beverly insisted a “proper wife” should quit her job immediately.
Sydney criticized everything—what Macy ate, how she walked, even how she sat.
That evening, Macy had spent hours baking Sydney’s favorite lemon cake. She wore a new navy dress, hoping to look her best.
The dinner started smoothly—until the drinks arrived.
Macy ordered sparkling water with lemon.
“How boring,” Beverly scoffed. “You can’t even enjoy a proper drink anymore.”
Sydney added that carbonation was bad for the baby, pushing Macy to switch to plain water just to avoid conflict.
Halfway through dinner, Macy turned pale and excused herself to the restroom when nausea hit.
When she came back and softly said she needed a moment before eating, Beverly delivered the comment that broke my patience.
“If you’re going to act like this, go eat in the bathroom. This night isn’t about you,” she said coldly.
The table fell silent.