After a quiet weekend at her grandma’s, my daughter said something that stopped my heart: “My brother lives at Grandma’s, but it’s a secret.” We only have one child. She doesn’t have a brother. So when she started saving toys “for him,” I knew I had to find out what my mother-in-law was hiding.
Evan and I’ve been married for eight years. We have a five-year-old daughter named Sophie who talks nonstop, asks a million questions, and makes every day louder and brighter than it has any right to be.
We’re not perfect, but we’re solid.
Evan’s mom, Helen, lives about 40 minutes away in a quiet neighborhood where every house looks the same and everyone waves when you drive past.
She’s the kind of grandmother who saves every crayon drawing, bakes too many cookies, and keeps a box of toys in her closet “just in case.”Sophie adores her. And Helen adores Sophie right back.
So when my MIL asked if Sophie could spend the weekend with her, I didn’t hesitate. Friday afternoon, I packed Sophie’s overnight bag with her favorite pajamas, her stuffed rabbit, and enough snacks.
“Be good to Grandma,” I said, kissing her forehead.
“I’m always good, Mommy!” Sophie replied, grinning.
I watched her run up Helen’s front steps, waving goodbye without looking back.
The weekend passed quietly. I did laundry, cleaned out the fridge, and caught up on shows Evan and I never finish because Sophie always interrupts. It was peaceful.
But the peace didn’t last long.
Sunday evening, I picked Sophie up. She was cheerful, chattering about cookies and board games and how Grandma let her stay up late watching cartoons.