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ragraph__B2z36″ style=”text-align: initial;”>She said she wanted it to be a true surprise for both of us.

And it was…

We pulled up to an ultra-modern, swanky steakhouse on the top floor of a high-rise with skyline views, the kind with a velvet rope and a guy with an iPad instead of a hostess stand! The kind of place where custom menus are printed daily, there are wine pairings, and desserts have no prices listed.

I leaned in toward Adam. “Did you know it was this place?”

He shook his head.

“No idea. They probably just wanted to do something nice… maybe.”

As we walked in, I spotted the familiar faces: Claire and her husband, Richard. Adam’s sister, Megan, with her husband, Bryan.

A few cousins I barely remembered, I think one was named Josh, or maybe Jordan.

Twelve of us total.

Dinner was already in full swing. There were three wine bottles on the table and a half-eaten seafood tower. They’d apparently started without us!

Claire air-kissed me.

“There she is! Birthday girl!”

I managed a smile. “Hi, everyone.”

We sat.

I ordered a modest filet and a glass of red. Everyone else? They went wild—lobster tails, caviar add-ons, and champagne like it was New Year’s Eve!

Megan actually said, “Let’s not hold back, it’s a celebration!”

They ordered things like cocktails, appetizers, dessert platters, and more!

I noticed Claire didn’t even glance at the menu before ordering the Wagyu ribeye, the one that’s always “market price.” She smiled and clinked glasses with Richard like they’d just won the lottery.

Adam leaned in. “Want to guess what this bill’s gonna be?”

I gave a dry laugh. “Don’t think I want to know.”

Two hours in, after dessert (a tower of profiteroles lit with a sparkler), a leather-bound bill folder was placed discreetly at the head of the table.

Claire opened it, paused, then looked at me with an odd smile.

“So! Happy birthday, sweetie! We figured you’d want to treat us all since it’s your special day!”

My fork froze mid-air.

“Excuse me?”

She slid the check across the table with her manicured nails.

$3,950!

“You’re doing so well at work now, right?” she cooed. “And Adam said you’re up for that big promotion! Come on, this is nothing to someone like you.”

Before I could even speak, everyone stood up.

Megan patted my shoulder. “Thanks for dinner, girl! You really outdid yourself!”

The cousins nodded, one even whistled low.

“Happy birthday, boss lady.”

And just like that, they filed out, heels clicking, blazers swinging, like this was all part of the plan!

Adam had gone to the bathroom five minutes earlier. I was alone, staring at a four-thousand-dollar bill, wondering if I was in a fever dream!

He came back, his face falling when he saw the table. “What… happened?”

“They left.”

He blinked.

“Left? Where?”

“Out. They said I was covering it.

For my birthday.”

Adam stood there silent, jaw clenched, trying to piece it together.

“Don’t pay for it,” he said. “Give me twenty minutes. I need to make a call.”

I frowned.

“Adam—”

“Just trust me.”

He kissed my forehead and walked out into the night.

I sat there, half-tempted to hand the waiter my entire bag and whisper, “Take what you need.”

But I waited.

Twenty minutes later, the doors slammed open!

Claire and Richard stormed in, fuming! My mother-in-law’s lipstick was slightly smudged, and Richard looked like he was choking on his own rage!

He threw a wad of hundred-dollar bills onto the table. “Is that what you wanted?

To humiliate us?! You stooped that low?!”

I was stunned into silence!

Adam walked in behind them, calm as ever, hands in his pockets.

“Thank you,” he said. “That’ll cover it.”

He turned to me and gave a quiet smile.

“Let’s go.”

Outside, as we made our way to the car, I finally found my voice. “What did you do?”

He exhaled. “I called Uncle Gary.”

“Your uncle?”

“You know, the one they’ve been begging to invest in their new eco-glamping startup?”

I blinked.

“Wait, they wanted Gary to fund them?”

“Yeah. They’ve been pitching him for weeks. I called and told him what happened tonight.

He said, ‘Hang on. Let’s call them together.’ Then he put me on the line while he called them.”

I couldn’t help it, I stopped walking. “What did he say?”

Adam grinned.

“He said, ‘If this is how you treat your own daughter-in-law, sticking her with a four-thousand-dollar bill as a birthday gift, then don’t expect a cent from me! I invest in families! Not parasites!’”

I covered my mouth.

“So they ran back in with the cash.

Probably thinking they were salvaging the deal,” Adam explained.

I looked at him, full of disbelief. “You didn’t have to do that!”

“Yes, I did,” he said. “New rule.

No more ‘surprises’ from my family. Not unless they’re cleared by both of us.”

I nodded, fighting back tears.

Claire and Richard didn’t speak to us for the next three months! It was the most blissful time since I started dating their son!

Then one afternoon, Adam got a voicemail.

He played it on speaker as we folded laundry.

“We hope you’ve learned not to weaponize family over a simple dinner,” Claire’s voice said, clipped and cold.

Adam didn’t even flinch. He just deleted the message.

Later that night, we sat on the porch, legs tangled on the swing, wrapped in a blanket.

“You okay?” he asked.

“I am now,” I said. “I spent so long trying to keep the peace with people who never even tried to respect me.”

He kissed my temple.

“Then let’s stop trying.”

“Deal,” I said. “And next year? Only pancakes in pajamas!”

He smiled.

“Only if I get to sing you ‘Happy Birthday’ with a kazoo.”

We laughed. And for the first time in years, I actually looked forward to my next birthday!

When my mother-in-law invited me to their lake house to get to know me better, I thought nothing of it. But when she started mistreating me during the visit, karma came knocking faster than expected!

This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes.

Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided “as is,” and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.

Source: amomama