On New Year’s Eve, my mom looked at my son’s gift and said, “We don’t keep presents from children who aren’t real family.”
The New Year’s Eve party was in full swing at my parents’ house when it happened. My mother had insisted on hosting, as she did every year, despite the fact that her home was now significantly smaller than the house my daughter owned. Downsizing had been hard on them after my father’s layoff, moving from their sprawling suburban home to this modest townhouse.
My brother Mark sat at the dining table with his girlfriend, both of them scrolling through their phones between conversations. The coffee table was covered with appetizers my mother had spent two days preparing, determined to prove that a smaller house didn’t mean a smaller celebration. My son, Lucas, age twelve, had been excited about his gift for weeks.
He’d saved his allowance from helping his father with yard work and carefully chosen a vintage fountain pen for my father, who collected them. Lucas had spent hours researching online, reading reviews on collector forums to make sure it was a Parker Duofold from the 1930s, one my father didn’t already have. He’d even had it professionally cleaned and restored at a specialty shop downtown, spending extra money he’d earned from tutoring younger students in math.
When gift exchange time came, Lucas proudly handed the wrapped box to his grandfather. My father opened it with his usual gruff efficiency, barely glancing at the pen inside. “Hm,” he said, setting it aside.
My mother leaned over to look. Her expression shifted to something cold. “We don’t keep presents from children who aren’t real family.”
The room went silent.
My sister Jennifer stopped mid-conversation. My brother Mark’s fork froze halfway to his mouth. Lucas blinked twice.
His face stayed neutral, though I saw his jaw tighten slightly. He’d learned that tell from me over the years. Then my daughter Emma stood up from where she’d been sitting quietly in the corner, checking her phone.
At twenty-four, she had her father’s height and my stubborn streak. She set her wine glass down with precise care. “Just like we don’t keep employees who insult the CEO’s kids,” she said, her voice pleasant and conversational.