Her Parents Rejected Their Grandson, Then Their Inbox Exposed Everything-myhoa

The cake looked like it was trying to leave the party.

It leaned so far to the left that Mason kept walking past it with the careful face he used when a cabinet was not level.

I told him not to touch it.

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He froze with one finger halfway in the air and said he was only emotionally supporting it.

I should have laughed harder than I did.

The kitchen smelled like vanilla frosting, lukewarm coffee, and charcoal drifting in through the open patio door.

Outside, the backyard had the bright, ordinary look of a Saturday you want your child to remember even if he is too young to keep the memory himself.

Blue and white balloons bumped against the fence.

A small American flag hung from the porch bracket beside the patio door, moving in the same warm breeze that made the plastic tablecloth flutter.

Borrowed folding chairs sat in uneven rows near the grass.

A cooler sweated beside the steps.

Our son Noah sat in his high chair wearing a paper crown he had already tried to eat twice.

He was one year old.

That meant he loved bananas, ceiling fans, wooden spoons, and Mason making monkey noises behind a paper plate.

It also meant he did not know that I had invited my parents with a hope I was ashamed to admit I still had.

The invitation had been simple.

A picture of Noah in striped pajamas.

The date.

The time.

Hope you can come celebrate his first birthday.

I sent it on Tuesday night at 8:14 p.m. while Noah banged a wooden spoon against his tray and Mason rinsed bottles at the sink.

My thumb hovered over the send arrow for almost five minutes.

I was thirty-two years old, married, a mother, with a mortgage, a job, and a child who trusted me completely, and still one unanswered text from my parents could turn me into a girl waiting to be chosen.

My mother did not answer.

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