The Night A Lobster Dinner Exposed What Her In-Laws Really Wanted-yumihong

My son picked food off the floor to save my dinner, and that night I learned my in-laws had never seen me as family.

They had seen me as a wallet with legs.

Sarah knew what exhaustion felt like before that night.

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She knew the ache between her shoulder blades after twelve hours at the salon, the chemical smell of hair dye that followed her home, and the sound of blow dryers still buzzing in her ears long after the last customer left.

What she did not know was that a five-year-old could learn shame so quickly.

She did not know Noah had been watching.

That morning started before sunrise.

At 5:38 a.m., Sarah stood at the seafood counter inside the grocery store with her purse strap digging into her shoulder and her work shoes already hurting.

The glass case was full of crushed ice, shrimp, fish, and five big lobsters she had no business buying on an ordinary weekday.

The price made her pause.

It always did.

Sarah was not careless with money.

She kept receipts in envelopes, wrote due dates on the calendar, and knew exactly how many twenties she had hidden in the back of the dresser drawer for emergencies.

But Noah had been talking for weeks about “restaurant food.”

He had said it in the back seat after day care.

He had said it while watching a commercial where a family laughed around a shiny seafood platter.

He had said it once in his dinosaur pajamas, half asleep, like a dream he knew better than to ask for too loudly.

“Mommy, do lobsters taste fancy?”

Sarah had laughed then because laughing was easier than telling a child that fancy food belonged to other people.

So she bought five.

One for her.

One for Michael.

One for Carmen.

One for Jessica.

And one for Noah, because he was the reason she was buying them at all.

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