З життя
A Ringtone on My Daughter-in-Law’s Phone Made Me Rethink Helping a Young Couple Find a Flat
You wont believe what made me change my mind about helping my son and his wife get their first flat it all started with one ridiculous ringtone on my daughter-in-laws phone.
You see, I live alone now in a lovely one-bedroom flat right in the heart of London. My husband passed away five years ago, and from my late aunt, I inherited another, roomier two-bedroom place across town not as fancy an area, but still really pleasant and well-kept. For a couple of years, Id been renting it out to a sweet young couple. Theyd come round monthly to pay the rent in pounds and to check everything was alright. I seriously never had a single problem with them.
When my son got married, he and his new wife, Emily, decided to be independent. They rented their own place and got serious about saving for a deposit on their first home. I was totally supportive, even though Id been thinking the family flat from my aunt could eventually just become theirs renovate it, redecorate it, sell it, whatever they fancied.
A year after their wedding, they had a little boy, and when my grandson was born, I became even more set on sorting the paperwork to eventually put the flat in my sons name. Then, about a week ago, that all changed.
It actually happened just after my 60th birthday. I thought, Why not have a proper celebration? booked a private room at my favourite restaurant, and invited loads of mates and family, of course including my son and Emily.
Now, Emily and I normally get on well enough, though she can be awfully emotional sometimes and honestly, I reckon Ive put any grumpy moments from her down to being young and, well, just the usual teething issues you get with in-laws. Still, the way she acted in front of everyone that evening really did a number on me.
They both came to the birthday do with their baby, but it was so loud and bustling, not the best for a little one. Emily let me know theyd probably slip out after an hour, which I completely understood.
Anyway, just as they were about to leave, Emily suddenly realised shed lost her mobile. I offered to help her look; she seemed stressed, so I rang her number to help her track it down. Everyone could see us, a bit of a giggle went round the room, and things quietened down a bit Then, from somewhere near the window sill, out of nowhere, this horrendous snarling and barking erupted! I swear, the ringtone was full-on angry hound. The whole room turned to look, and there was Emily, bright red, dashing over to grab her phone and hang up.
People who knew me kept glancing awkwardly between us, and my brother, bless him, tried to lighten the mood by starting up another toast with the music. But honestly, you know when somethings just off?
For the rest of the evening, people were quietly nattering about the ringtone which, by the way, Emily had set especially for my number. It was all everyone talked about, more than the cake or speeches. The next day I brought it up with my son, James, thinking he might talk to Emily, given hed surely heard that dog bark a million times before. But he completely brushed it off, said it was nothing.
Since then, Ive kept my distance. Decided theres no rush on handing over that flat now maybe when things feel a bit warmer between us Ill revisit the idea. Right now, though, I honestly just want a basic apology from the pair of them. If thats truly how they see me as a barking dog then, well, so be it. Thats their prerogative.
