When I woke up on my thirty-seventh birthday, I expected very little—over the years, birthdays had become less about celebration and more about pretending
When I woke up on my thirty-seventh birthday, I expected very little—over the years, birthdays had become less about celebration and more about pretending that I didn’t care. My husband, Trevor, had always dismissed birthdays as “childish,” saying adults shouldn’t expect gifts or surprises. I’d learned to accept it, or at least, I thought I had.
That morning, I rolled over in bed to find Trevor scrolling through his phone. “Morning,” I said softly. He grunted, not looking up.
“Morning. You might wanna get up early today. The guys are coming over to watch the game.”
I blinked.
“Today? But… It’s Saturday. And it’s my—”
“I know it’s your birthday,” he said, smirking.
“Relax. I got you something.”
I sat up, a flicker of hope stirring. Maybe he’d finally remembered that I wasn’t just the housemaid or the one who handled the bills and cooked his meals.
Trevor reached to the side of the bed, pulled out a tall, thin box wrapped lazily in grocery-store paper, and handed it to me. “Go on,” he said, grinning. I tore off the paper.
Inside was a brand-new mop. Not even a nice one—just one of those cheap ones from the discount store. He laughed loudly, clearly proud of himself.
“Now you can finally stop complaining about how the old one squeaks!”
I stared at him, my face burning. “A mop. You bought me a mop for my birthday.”
“Well, yeah.
You’re always cleaning. Thought it’d make your life easier.”
“I clean because no one else does, Trevor,” I said quietly. “Not because it’s my favorite hobby.”
He shrugged and stood up.
“Oh, come on, don’t get all dramatic. You know your place, don’t you? You’re good at keeping this house running.
That’s your thing.”
Those words—“know your place”—hung in the air like poison. He didn’t even notice the way my eyes filled. Instead, he started humming as he threw on his jersey.
“Now, be a good sport, huh? Maybe make us some nachos later. The guys will be hungry.”
By noon, the living room was full of Trevor’s friends, loud and drunk.
They tracked mud across the floor I’d just cleaned, spilled beer on the couch, and laughed about it. I hovered around with a garbage bag, trying to keep things from getting worse. Every time I stooped to pick something up, Trevor made some kind of joke.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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