His Mother Called Me Staff Until The Board Needed My Signature-thuyhien

Lewis warned me before I ever reached his parents’ estate.

He called while I was tying a ribbon around a cinnamon apple pie and said his parents could be difficult, which was the gentle version of a sentence he had clearly practiced.

I told him I could handle difficult.

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I had chosen a simple silk dress that had belonged to my mother, a bottle of wine from my family’s vineyard with a cheap store sticker over the label, and the kind of hope that looks sweet from the outside but feels foolish from the inside.

Lewis met me at the door with nervous eyes.

His mother, Marjorie, met me with an inventory.

She looked at the pie, the bottle, the dress, and finally my face.

“Trader Joe’s?” she asked.

I said yes, because technically the sticker was.

She laughed softly and set the bottle beside the trash can, where everyone walking through the hallway could see what she thought of it.

For the first few minutes, everyone performed manners.

Then his father asked what I did for work.

I said I was between positions, because I was transitioning from CEO to chairman and I had learned that explaining money early could ruin a room faster than spilling wine.

Marjorie repeated the phrase as if she were tasting something sour.

“Between positions,” she said to Lewis’s sister. “Is that what they call unemployed now?”

His sister laughed and asked where I had found my dress.

When I said it had been my mother’s, Marjorie looked almost pleased, as if grief counted as poor tailoring.

Then she mentioned Sarah, the polished ex-girlfriend she clearly wished Lewis had brought home instead.

Lewis put down his fork and asked them to stop.

Marjorie smiled at him without warmth.

“Some girls are raised with class,” she said. “It is not something they can learn.”

I kept my hands folded in my lap.

After dinner, she pointed at the table and asked if I minded clearing it.

It was not a question.

Lewis stood, but Marjorie tugged him back down by the sleeve, the way someone might stop a child from petting a strange dog.

“Don’t be silly,” she said. “Wifely duties are good practice for girls like her.”

I carried plates to the kitchen while they moved to the living room and laughed loudly enough for me to know they wanted me to hear it.

Lewis’s sister came in with a half-full glass and dropped it into the sink so hard soapy water jumped onto my dress.

“You missed a spot,” she said, pointing at a plate. “My housekeeper would have been fired for that.”

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