She Raised His Daughter For Ten Years. Then He Thanked Her For Free Labor-nhu9999 - Chainityai

She Raised His Daughter For Ten Years. Then He Thanked Her For Free Labor-nhu9999

The backyard smelled like cut grass, buttercream frosting, and warm stone still holding the day’s heat.

The DJ’s speakers hummed beside the pool, low and steady, while caterers moved under white string lights with silver trays balanced on one hand.

A small American flag on the back porch stirred every time the evening breeze crossed the yard.

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Sarah stood near the cake table and tried to make herself smile.

She should have been happy.

Grace had gotten into Princeton.

That sentence alone should have been enough to lift every year of worry off Sarah’s shoulders.

Ten years of school pickup lines.

Ten years of late-night flash cards.

Ten years of grocery-store dinners eaten cold in the car because there was practice, tutoring, a meeting with the counselor, or a last-minute project due before midnight.

Ten years of Grace sitting at the kitchen island in a hoodie, crying over AP Calculus, scholarship deadlines, and a Princeton portal that froze at 11:48 PM the night before submission.

Sarah had been there for all of it.

David had not.

He stood near the bar in his navy blazer, laughing with the same golf friends who never remembered Sarah’s name until they wanted help from her marketing agency.

He looked polished, relaxed, expensive.

He looked like a proud father.

That was the part that made Sarah’s chest ache.

David had not attended the sophomore-year parent-teacher conference where Grace’s English teacher quietly suggested she was pushing herself too hard.

He had not sat in the school guidance office when Grace first whispered that Princeton was the dream she was afraid to say out loud.

He had not read her Common App essay.

He had not checked the financial aid checklist.

He had not answered the counselor emails Sarah printed and kept in a folder labeled GRACE — COLLEGE APPLICATIONS.

But he knew how to host a party that made people clap for him.

Sarah had paid the catering invoice.

She had paid the DJ deposit.

She had paid for the tent, the orange-and-black flowers, and the cake with Grace’s name piped across the top in careful icing.

She had also paid in ways nobody could write on a receipt.

She had paid with sleep.

With patience.

With the soft voice she used when Grace woke from bad dreams and pretended she was just thirsty.

Some men do not want a family.

They want an audience.

Then they call the applause love.

Grace stood by the pool in a pale blue dress and worn white sneakers.

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