“Sir, everyone will notice.”
“That’s the point.”
Within minutes, staff began clearing bottles from the bar. The huge cake disappeared through a side door. My mother jumped up in outrage.
“Who authorized this?”
The waiter glanced at me.
She stormed over.
“Kenneth, what are you doing?”
“I’m paying for what’s necessary. Nothing more.”
My father’s face turned red.
“Don’t embarrass us.”
“My children were seated beside flowerpots at a party I paid for,” I said. “That was embarrassing.”
Brenda sneered that I was ruining Mom’s birthday.
“For years,” I replied, “I paid your rent, your bills, your debts, and your children’s parties. I asked for nothing. But today you showed me exactly where my family stands.”
My mother began crying.
“You’re ruining everything.”
“No,” I said. “You ruined it when you decided my children needed to learn their place.”
I signed the reduced invoice, took Sarah and the kids, and left.
In the car, Brenda texted me:
“If you want to talk about money, let’s talk about the mountain property Mom says is hers.”
That was when I realized the lies were bigger than I knew.