“Your mother is not allowed to take food from this house unless invited. She is not allowed to insult me at my table. And if she wants a family feast, she can host it.”
Diego rubbed his forehead. “She’ll lose her mind.”
“Then she can lose it at her house.”
For the first time, Diego almost smiled. Then he saw Paola’s face and realized this was not playful.
“You’re serious.”
“I have never been more serious.”
He agreed.
For one month, things improved.
Diego deposited his proportional share into the household account. He cooked twice a week, badly at first, then better. He learned the difference between dish soap and dishwasher detergent after an incident involving bubbles across the kitchen floor. He called his mother less. He even told Elvira no when she asked him to send money for a “small emergency” that turned out to be a cruise deposit.
Paola watched carefully, hopeful but not naïve.
Then came Elvira’s birthday.
She invited everyone to a steakhouse downtown and informed Diego that he and Paola would be paying because “children honor their mother.” Diego told Paola at breakfast, cautiously, as if approaching a wild animal.
“My mom wants us to cover dinner.”
“How many people?”
“Fourteen.”
Paola buttered her toast. “No.”
He exhaled. “I told her we couldn’t.”
Paola paused. “You did?”
“Yes.”
“What did she say?”
“That you turned me against my family.”
Paola took a bite of toast. “Creative. Wrong, but creative.”
Diego looked tired. “She cried.”
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