Grandma Said “Deal” to Free Babysitting—Then the Calls Began-felicia

The first thing I remember is the fork against the wineglass.

Madison tapped it three times.

Not hard enough to break anything.

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Just sharp enough to make every conversation in my son’s backyard stop at once.

The grill was smoking near the fence, and the late June air smelled like charcoal, sweet relish, cut grass, and sunscreen melting on warm shoulders.

Tyler’s college friends were spread across the lawn with paper plates balanced in one hand.

Neighbors stood by the cooler.

Cousins leaned near the patio steps.

My five grandchildren chased each other through folding chairs like little sparks from a fire no adult had the energy to contain.

I sat near the rose bushes with a sweating plastic cup of iced tea in my hand and told myself I would enjoy this one afternoon.

That was my whole plan.

Sit.

Smile.

Eat something grilled.

Leave before dark.

For once, I wanted to be Diane, not Grandma On Call.

Madison had other plans.

She stood on the patio step in a white sundress that probably cost more than my monthly electric bill, one arm looped around Tyler’s waist like she was presenting both of them as evidence.

Her hair had been curled into perfect soft waves.

Her smile was bright and practiced, the same smile she used at church luncheons and school events when she wanted people to think our family had no loose threads.

“Everyone,” she called, laughing as if she were about to toast somebody’s anniversary, “we have an announcement.”

A few people cheered.

Someone near the cooler called, “Baby number six?”

Everybody laughed.

Even I smiled a little, because the children were already enough noise to fill a house twice Tyler’s size.

Madison waved one manicured hand.

“Absolutely not. We finally figured out how to save our marriage.”

The backyard changed after that.

Not loudly.

Worse.

Softly.

People stopped chewing.

Tyler gave a stiff little laugh, but he did not step away from her.

I looked at my son and saw exhaustion in his face.

I had seen it for months.

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