Part 1:
Every family has that one person who treats your home like an all-inclusive resort but never thinks to bring so much as a bag of chips. In my case, that person was my mother-in-law, Juliette. She never arrived alone, either. She came with her daughters, their children, their opinions, and absolutely nothing to contribute.
So when they showed up empty-handed yet again for the Fourth of July, I decided it was finally time to serve them a meal they would never forget.
My name is Annie, and after years of hosting family cookouts, I had learned one painful truth: throwing a barbecue for my husband’s relatives felt less like welcoming guests and more like operating a restaurant where nobody paid, nobody tipped, and somehow everyone still left believing I owed them more.
I had been married to Bryan for seven years. We had two sweet kids, a cozy home in the countryside, and a life that used to feel calm and manageable. Then Juliette made our house her favorite holiday destination.
She had the confidence of a queen, the manners of a critic, and the self-awareness of a paper plate in a windstorm.
Whenever she visited, she brought her two daughters, Sarah and Kate, plus six grandchildren who seemed to multiply the second they crossed the threshold. They arrived like a traveling carnival of noise, demands, sticky fingers, and empty hands.
A few weeks before the Fourth, she called to announce their Memorial Day visit as if she were doing me a favor.
“Annie, darling, we’re coming for Memorial Day,” she said brightly. “The kids just love your ribs.”
Of course they loved them. I bought the ribs. I marinated them. I cooked them. I served them. Then Juliette sat in my patio chair and told me what I had done wrong.
That Memorial Day had been another exhausting performance.
Juliette walked in and immediately started rearranging my living room like she had been hired to redesign the place.
“This couch would look much better facing the window,” she said, already shoving it across the floor.
“I actually like it where it is,” I replied.
“Nonsense, dear. I have a good eye for these things.”
She moved my sectional until my coffee table nearly blocked the hallway, then stood back like she had just created a masterpiece.
“And those roses outside,” she added. “You really should trim them. They’re looking a little wild.”
Those roses were my pride. I had spent three years growing them. But to Juliette, anything that was not under her control needed correcting.
While she criticized my furniture and flowers, Sarah and Kate took over the kitchen island. They spread snacks, bags, cups, wipes, and toys across my clean counters without asking. Their children ran through the house like a storm with shoes on.
Eight-year-old Tyler dripped popsicle juice onto my white carpet and demanded to know where the bathroom was.
“Down the hall, sweetie,” I said, already reaching for the carpet cleaner.
His sister Madison looked into my pantry and whined, “Why don’t you have good snacks?”
The “good snacks,” of course, were the ones I always bought. The ones they never brought. The ones that magically came out of my grocery budget every single holiday.
Outside, Juliette called from the patio, “Annie, the meat looks a little dry. Are you sure you’re not overcooking it?”
I smiled because screaming was not polite.
By the time they finally left that night, they had eaten through nearly two hundred dollars’ worth of food, left trash in my yard, sticky fingerprints on my doors, and juice boxes behind the couch.
Bryan helped me load the dishwasher while I picked popsicle sticks out of my flower beds.
“Bee,” I said, using his nickname, “your mother moved the couch again.”
“She’s just trying to help, Nini,” he said gently, though I could see the guilt in his face.
“She also ate two hundred dollars’ worth of groceries. Again.”
He sighed. “I know. I’ll talk to her.”
But we both knew he probably would not. Bryan loved me, but he had spent his whole life trying not to upset his mother. And I had spent years trying to be patient.
The next morning, Juliette called.
“Annie, darling! We had such a wonderful time yesterday. The children are still talking about those ribs.”
“I’m glad they liked them,” I said.
“And we’re all coming for the Fourth of July,” she continued. “The whole gang. We’ll make a weekend of it. Won’t that be fun?”
My hand tightened around the phone.
“The whole weekend?” I asked.
“Yes! We’ll arrive Friday afternoon. Make sure you get plenty of those little sausages. The kids devour them. And Sarah has not stopped talking about your potato salad. Don’t forget the ribs, dear. Juicy, like last time.”
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