З життя
A Sweet Treat on Someone Else’s Dime
A Slice of Someone Elses Pie
“Put your hand on your heartmy blood pressures all over the place. The doctor says I need expensive medication Youll help your mum, wont you?”
***
The flat smelled of vanilla and freshly brewed coffeeCharlotte had just pulled an apple and cinnamon pie from the oven. The golden crust crackled under the knife, filling the kitchen with a warm, comforting scent, as if autumn itself had peeked through the window. She was carefully arranging slices on porcelain plates when the doorbell rangsharp, insistent, like the tick of a metronome.
On the doorstep stood her mother-in-law, Margaret. Elegant in a cashmere coat the colour of sea foam, her silver hair perfectly styled, a radiant smile on her lips. In her hand was a bag from an upmarket patisseriethe sort where a single cake cost as much as a familys weekly groceries.
“Charlotte, darling, hello!” she trilled, arms outstretched for a hug. “I was just passing and thought Id pop in. It smells divine in here! Just like my childhood…”
Charlotte forced a polite smile, feeling the familiar tension coil inside herlike a spring wound too tight. She knew this wasnt a casual visit.
Margaret had become a persistent presence three years ago, after her husbandEdwards fatherleft. At first, it was sweet: Sunday roasts, cosy chats over tea, help with the chores. But gradually, the visits multiplied, and the requests grew bolder.
“Edward, love,” Margaret would sigh, theatrically pressing a hand to her chest, “my blood pressures dreadful. The doctor says I need these expensive pills You wouldnt let your poor mum suffer, would you?”
Edward, kind-hearted and obliging, never refused. At first, the sums were smalltwenty, fifty quid. Then they ballooned to a hundred, two hundred. Charlotte tried to talk to him, but hed just wave her off, irritation flickering in his eyes.
“Charlotte, come on Mums not well. We cant abandon her. Shes family.”
Meanwhile, Margaret kept “forgetting” to mention that the pills had already been bought, and the money had vanishedinto “urgent vitamin courses,” “miracle spa treatments,” or “helping a friend in need.”
Then one day, Charlotte stumbled upon a social media post: Margaret in a café, grinning over a cappuccino and a raspberry tart, caption reading, “Sweet treatsthe best cure for the blues!”
Charlotte frowned. Just yesterday, Margaret had called Edward in tears:
“Darling, I feel awful My pills ran out, and the doctor says I need these imported onesthey cost a fortune! I dont know how Ill afford them I might as well lie down and die…”
Charlotte showed Edward the photo. He scowled, swiping the screen as if to erase it. Confusion flashed in his eyes, but the excuse came quickly:
“Maybe its an old photo? Or she just wanted a little pick-me-up Even ill people deserve small joys.”
“Edward,” Charlotte said quietly, a lump forming in her throat, “shes spending your money on cafés while were scrimping to fix the washing machine. Dont you see the problem?”
That evening, Margaret called Edward, sobbing so loudly Charlotte heard it through the speaker:
“Edward, Im so lonely Youve no idea how hard it is. And now Charlottes turned against meaccusing me of wasting money! All I want is a little warmth…”
Edward turned to Charlotte, lips pressed into a thin line.
“Why are you always on at her?” he snapped, slamming his phone onto the side table. The sound was jarring. “Shes barely holding it together, and youre making it worse!”
Anger simmered in Charlottehot, molten.
“Im not on at her! I just want you to see the truth. Shes manipulating you!”
“Youre just tight-fisted!” Edward shot back, the words hanging like poison in the air. “Begrudging my own mother a few quid?”
Charlotte wordlessly retreated to the bedroom, closing the door with a soft click. Outside, rain tapped against the window, mirroring the storm inside her.
***
The next day, Margaret arrived to “make peace,” bearing chrysanthemums in lavender wrapping. She apologised for “letting emotions get the better of her,” but her eyes held a cold calculation beneath the remorse.
“Charlotte, I know you worry about finances,” she said sweetly, stirring her tea with hypnotic grace. “But caring for your elders matters. Im not asking for muchjust a little help now and then.”
Charlotte gripped her cup until her fingers ached. The teas usually soothing aroma now felt suffocating.
“Margaret, have you ever considered we might be tired too? That we have our own needssavings, holidays, a future?”
Margaret gasped, her bangles clinking.
“Oh, darling, youre so young You dont understand how quickly age creeps up. Yesterday, I nearly fainted! The doctor says I need vitamins, tests, massagesit all adds up…”
Before Charlotte could reply, Edward called.
“Mum, where are you?” Anxiety edged his voice.
“At yours, sweetheart,” Margaret cooed, her tone softening like silk. “Charlotte and I are having a lovely chat. Dont fret.”
Charlotte stepped onto the balcony. The icy wind was a relief after the cloying flowers and hollow apologies. Below, the city bustledlights, cars, people with their own truths. She felt adrift in a maze of lies.
***
A week later, Charlotte staged an intervention. Receipts, screenshots, and photos covered the coffee table like battle plans.
“Edward, look,” she said firmly, though her hands trembled. “Heres a pharmacy receipt for £50. Heres your mum at a café the same day. Heres her texting Im so ill, then posting theatre selfies an hour later. And hereneed a heater, followed by a salon appointment…”
Edwards face darkened as he pieced together the puzzle hed refused to see.
“Mum, is this true?” he asked when she next visited, spreading the evidence before her. His voice cracked.
Margaret paled but rallied, pressing a hand to her chest, tears wellingreal or not, it was impossible to tell.
“Darling, the theatres my joy Is it a crime to treat myself? Im not squandering it allI just want to feel alive!”
“You said it was for medicine!” Edwards voice rose, sharp with betrayal. “Youve been lying for months?”
“I I just wanted you to remember me,” she whispered, tears glistening. “You barely call, barely visit I was so lonely. Like I didnt matter anymore…”
Charlotte watched, her chest tight. Margaret played Edward like a fiddle, but this time, he didnt fold.
“Enough!” he shouted, the word echoing like thunder. “No more games! You used me. You knew Id never say no, and you twisted that. And you called Charlotte stingy Thats low. Really low.”
Margaret sobbed into her hands.
“Edward, you dont understand I never meant”
“I understand perfectly,” he cut in, steel in his voice. “And I wont let you manipulate us anymore. Youll get helpbut honestly. No more just-in-case cash.”
***
After that, Edward set boundaries. Hed buy her medicine himself, help with choresbut no more handouts.
Margaret flinched as if struck, fingers plucking at the tablecloth.
“Edward, how could you Im your mother!”
“Exactly why Im doing this,” he said. “Because I love you. And I want us to be honest.”
Charlotte said nothing. The triumph she expected didnt comejust weary relief. Margarets trembling wasnt grief; it was the panic of a strategy failing.
***
Weeks passed. Margaret tested the waterstearful calls, hints at lonelinessthen retreated into silence.
One day, she arrived unannounced (as usual). Charlotte made tea, studying her. Something unfamiliar flickered in Margarets face as she gazed out at the rain.
“Feeling down?” Charlotte asked gently.
Margaret turned slowly. The mask was gonejust weariness remained.
“No. Just thinking.”
They sat in silence, but it no longer smothered; it soothed, like a warm blanket.
“Ive always been selfish,” Margaret admitted abruptly, not meeting Charlottes eyes. “When my husband left, I felt like Id lost everything. And youyou were so sure of yourself. It scared me.”
Charlotte blinked. This was the first real thing Margaret had ever said to her.
“Scared you?”
“Yes. That Edward would forget me leave me alone. And the moneyit was my way of keeping him close. Pathetic, really. Im sorry, Charlotte.”
The bitterness in her voice was startlingly genuine.
