She Cooked One Birthday Dish. Then Her In-Laws Lost The House-mdue - Chainityai

She Cooked One Birthday Dish. Then Her In-Laws Lost The House-mdue

The smell of vinegar hit the dining room before anyone picked up a fork.

It was not harsh.

Not to me.

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To me, it smelled like my father standing in our old kitchen, laughing under his breath because the oil had popped on his wrist again.

It smelled like birthdays before grief made the house quiet.

It smelled like the one dish I had asked the world to let me keep.

The fish sat in the center of the table, fried crisp at the edges, glazed with sweet-and-sour sauce that caught the overhead light.

Around it were seven other dishes.

Seven dishes for them.

One for me.

Michael still found a way to make that too much.

He slapped his chopsticks against the rim of his bowl hard enough that the sound made everyone look up.

“Why do you always have to put vinegar in fish?” he snapped. “You know my mother can’t stand that smell.”

I had been reaching across him with a ladle of soup.

My hand froze halfway between the bowl and the pot.

“There are eight dishes on this table,” I said. “Which one has vinegar?”

Michael’s jaw flexed.

He knew the answer.

Everyone knew the answer.

Only the fish.

Only the dish my father used to cook for me every year on my birthday.

Linda, my mother-in-law, lifted her eyes from her plate with the slow irritation of a woman who had never believed I deserved patience.

She had eaten my cooking for five years.

She had complained through almost all of it.

Too salty.

Too rich.

Too much garlic.

Too little garlic.

Too oily.

Too plain.

If I adjusted, she called it luck.

If I forgot, she called it disrespect.

Michael had once told me not to take it personally.

“That’s just how Mom talks,” he said during our first year of marriage, when I cried in the laundry room after she told me my soup tasted like something from a cafeteria.

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