She Broke Her Mother-in-Law’s China and Exposed the Christmas Lie-myhoa

My Mother-in-Law Wouldn’t Let Me Go Home for Christmas – “Raina is here for the first time. Stay and cook lunch. Don’t embarrass this family.”

The morning after Christmas had a tired smell to it.

Cold cinnamon rolls sat under foil on the counter.

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The Christmas tree was starting to dry out in the corner, dropping needles every time the furnace clicked on.

Coffee had been warming too long in the pot, turning sharp and bitter in the kitchen air.

Winona DeWitt stood by the front door with her coat already buttoned and two gift bags hooked over her fingers.

Outside, the neighborhood was quiet in that strange way it gets after a holiday.

Driveways still had cars parked crooked from visiting relatives.

A red bow was tied around the Wexleys’ mailbox.

A small American flag hung near the porch window, faded at the edge from a summer nobody had bothered to take down.

Winona’s parents lived across town.

They had saved her a chair at their table.

Her mother had texted at 8:55 that morning to say the breakfast casserole was in the oven and her father had made extra coffee because he still believed Calder might come with her.

Winona had not corrected her.

She had only texted back at 9:17.

Leaving soon. Save me a plate.

That one plate mattered more than anyone in the Wexley house understood.

For three years, Christmas had belonged to Calder’s family first.

Thanksgiving had belonged to Calder’s family first.

Birthdays somehow belonged to Calder’s family first, too, because Odette Wexley always had a reason why Winona should be useful before she was missed.

This year, Winona had made one promise to her own parents.

She would come the morning after Christmas.

No errands.

No cooking for in-laws.

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