Alex was turning eighteen, and my husband, Bill, and I wanted to do something that felt as big as the year ahead of him. We landed on a car—safe, reliable, a little cool. I spent months saving and even longer obsessing over safety ratings, insurance, mileage, color.
Bill’s business had been rough, so I covered most of it—seventy percent—while he put in thirty. It wasn’t about keeping score. It was about Alex.
He’s my stepson on paper, but in real life he’s just my kid too. A week before the party, Bill said, way too casually, “Oh—Lisa wants to chip in five percent. So we can say it’s from all of us.”
I turned off the stove.
“She wants to do what?”
“Just so it looks… united,” he said, already half inside the fridge. It would have been funny if I didn’t know Lisa. She loves optics like some people love oxygen.
She’ll stand in a team photo and write “So proud of my staff’s hard work,” as if breathing in the same room were contribution enough. She also can’t stand that I’m younger, that I’m comfortable, that I don’t apologize for either. But I told myself: it’s Alex’s day.
Let it go. We strung café lights across the backyard, rented patio heaters, set out platters, and invited everyone. When Alex arrived and saw the car—black, clean lines, a ridiculous red bow—he made a sound like he’d been launched into orbit.
“Is this real?” he yelled, hugging me, hugging Bill, hugging Lisa because we’d agreed to present it as a joint gift. Fine. I can share a moment.
We cut cake. People passed plates. The night felt easy.
Then Lisa turned her voice up to ten. “So, Alex,” she said, touching his shoulder, “how do you like the car your dad and I picked? We spent weeks finding the perfect model and color.”
I set the cake knife down, very gently.
Bill’s mother cooed, “Lisa, you’re so thoughtful.”
“Oh, it was nothing,” Lisa said, doing that humble head tilt. “We had a few options lined up, but this one really stood out.”
I walked the cake over, smiled, sang, clapped with everyone else. Then I looked at her.
“Wow, Lisa. I didn’t realize you were so involved. What were the other models?”
She blinked.
Then she smiled like a cat. “Before you quiz me, remind me—did you even contribute? What was it—three percent?
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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