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A Sweet Treat on Someone Else’s Dime

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**A Slice at Someone Elses Expense**

*”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 coffeePenelope 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 aroma, as if autumn itself had peeked in through the window. She was carefully arranging slices on porcelain plates when the doorbell rangsharp, insistent, like the ticking of a metronome.

On the doorstep stood her mother-in-law, Margaret Whitmore. Elegant in a sea-green cashmere coat, her silver hair perfectly coiffed, she beamed as she clutched a bag from an upscale patisseriethe kind where a single cake cost as much as a familys weekly grocery shop.

“Penelope, darling, hello!” she trilled, arms outstretched for a hug. “I was just passing and thought Id pop in. It smells heavenly in here! Just like my childhood…”

Penelope forced a smile, feeling the familiar tension coil inside herlike a spring wound too tight. She knew this visit wasnt accidental.

Margaret had become a persistent presence in their lives three years ago, after her husbandOlivers fatherleft. At first, it was sweet: Sunday roasts, cosy chats over tea, the odd helping hand. But soon, her drop-ins grew frequent, and the requests more insistent.

“Oliver, my love,” Margaret would sigh, pressing a dramatic hand to her chest, “my blood pressures dreadful. The doctor says I need these new pills You wouldnt let your poor mum suffer, would you?”

Oliver, kind-hearted and gullible, never refused. At first, the sums were smalltwenty, fifty quid. Then they ballooned to two hundred, three hundred. Penelope tried to talk to him, but hed just wave her off, irritation flickering in his eyes.

“Pen, really Mums unwell. We cant abandon her. Shes *family*.”

Meanwhile, Margaret “forgot” to mention that the pills were already bought, and the money had vanishedon “urgent vitamins,” a “miracle spa treatment,” or an “emergency loan” for a friend.

Then one day, Penelope stumbled upon Margarets social media: a beaming selfie in a café, cradling a cappuccino and a raspberry tart, captioned, *”Sweet treats are the best cure for the blues!”*

Penelope frowned. Just yesterday, Margaret had sobbed down the phone:

“Oliver, I feel *awful* The pills ran out, and the doctor says I need imported ones, but they cost a *fortune* I dont know what to doI might as well lie down and die!”

She showed Oliver the photo. He scowled, swiping the screen as if he could erase it. For a moment, he looked lostthen shrugged.

“Maybe its old? Or she just needed a pick-me-up. Even sick people deserve a bit of joy.”

“Ollie,” Penelope said quietly, a lump in her throat, “shes spending our money on cakes while were scrimping to fix the washing machine. *Our* machine. Do you really not see the problem?”

That evening, Margaret called in tearsPenelope could hear the wails through the phone.

“Oliver, Im so *lonely* Youve no idea how hard it is. And now Penelopes turned against meaccusing me of wasting *your* money! All I want is a little warmth”

Oliver turned to Penelope, jaw tight.

“Why are you always on at Mum?” he snapped, slamming his phone down. The sound echoed like a gunshot. “Shes hanging by a thread, and youre pushing her over the edge!”

Penelopes anger boiled overhot, molten.

“Im not on at her! Im asking you to *see* the truth. Shes manipulating you!”

“Youre just *stingy*!” Oliver shouted, the words hanging like poison in the air. “Too tight to spare a few quid for my own mother?”

Penelope walked out, shutting the bedroom door softly behind her. Outside, rain tapped against the window, a quiet echo of the storm inside her.

***

The next day, Margaret arrived to “make amends.” She brought chrysanthemumslavender-wrapped, extravagantand apologised for her “silly emotions,” though her eyes stayed cool and calculating behind the act.

“Penelope, I know you worry about money,” she said smoothly, stirring her tea with hypnotic elegance. “But caring for your elders is so important. Im not asking for muchjust a little help now and then.”

Penelope gripped her cup until her fingers ached. The teas usual comfort now felt suffocating.

“Margaret, have you ever considered *we* might need things too? The house, holidays, our *future*?”

Margaret gasped, her bracelets 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!”

Penelope opened her mouthbut Oliver called.

“Mum, where are you?” His voice was tense. “Ive been worried.”

“At yours, sweetheart,” Margaret cooed, her tone instantly silkier. “Just having a lovely chat with Penelope. Dont fret.”

Penelope stepped onto the balcony. The wind bit her face, but it was better than the cloying flowers and hollow apologies. Below, the city buzzedlights, cars, people living their lives. Hers felt like a maze of lies.

***

A week later, Penelope played her hand. She spread receipts, screenshots, and photos across the dining tableneat stacks, like a generals battle plan.

“Oliver, look,” she said firmly, though her hands trembled. “Heres a pharmacy receipt for £50. And heres your mum at a café that same day. Heres her Im so ill textthen a selfie at the theatre. And thisI need a heater, followed by a salon appointment”

Olivers face darkened as he pieced it togethera puzzle he didnt want to solve.

“Mum, is this true?” he asked when Margaret next visited, spreading the evidence before her. His voice cracked.

Margaret paledthen rallied. A hand fluttered to her chest; tears welled (real or not, who could say?).

“Darling, the theatres my *joy*! Is it a crime to treat myself? Im not squandering itI just want to *feel alive*!”

“You *lied*!” Olivers voice rose, raw. “All those monthspills, emergenciesit was all *nonsense*!”

“I I just wanted you to *care*,” she whispered, tears spilling. “You never call, never visit I was so *lonely*.”

Penelope watched, her chest tight. Margaret played Oliver like a fiddlebut this time, he didnt budge.

“*Enough*!” he shouted, the word ringing like thunder. “No more games! You *used* me. And you made Penelope the villain. Its *disgusting*.”

Margaret sobbed into her hands. “You dont understand I never meant”

“I understand *perfectly*,” Oliver cut in, steel in his voice. “No more cash just in case. If you need medicine, *Ill* buy it. If you need help, *call*. But no more lies.”

Margaret trembled, fingers twisting the tablecloth. “Oliver how could you Im your *mother*.”

“Exactly,” he said. “Which is why Im saying it. Because I love you.”

Penelope stayed silent. This wasnt victoryjust exhaustion. Margarets shaking hands werent grief, but a last-ditch tactic.

***

The next weeks were tense. Margaret oscillated between tearful calls and icy silence. Then one day, she arrived unannounced (as usual). Penelope made tea, studying hersomething unfamiliar shadowed Margarets face. She sat by the window, watching the rain blur the city.

“Are you alright?” Penelope asked gently.

Margaret turned slowly. For once, her mask was offjust weariness.

“No. Just thinking.”

Penelope poured tea. The silence stretched, but it no longer smotheredit wrapped around them, soft as a blanket.

“Ive been selfish,” Margaret said abruptly, avoiding her eyes. “When my husband left, I felt like Id lost everything. And youyou were so *steady*. I was scared.”

“Scared?”

“Yes. That Oliver would forget me. That Id be alone. The money it was my way of keeping him close. Pathetic

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