Mr. Harrison’s question hung in the air, heavy and demanding. Why are you crying? The sentence echoed in my ears, stirring the emotions I had desperately suppressed to save my husband’s face. I bit my lower lip hard to hold back a sob that threatened to erupt. My eyes burned. Tears welled up, blurring my vision. How should I answer? If I told the truth, Mark would be furious. If I lied, my heart would break even more. I glanced sideways at Mark. My husband was glaring at me, a clear threat that said, “Don’t say anything stupid.” His face was tense, his jaw clenched. He shook his head almost imperceptibly, a signal for me to stay quiet or find another excuse.
Seeing that I remained silent with my head down, Mark, impatient, intervened. He let out a chuckle, a clumsy and forced sound. He approached Mr. Harrison, trying to pat his boss on the shoulder, but restrained himself at the last moment. With a condescending tone, Mark said, “Ah, please excuse my wife, sir. She’s like that, a bit of a crybaby, and overly sensitive. You know how women are. Maybe she’s emotional about your visit or just tired from cooking all day. It’s nothing, Mr. Harrison. Don’t worry.” Mark tried to minimize my feelings to turn my pain into a joke or a common female weakness. He wanted to hide at all costs that he was celebrating a party on top of his wife’s grief.
But Mr. Harrison was not so easily fooled. He didn’t laugh. On the contrary, his face grew even more serious. He turned slowly to face Mark. His gaze was as sharp as a hawk stalking its prey. “Mr. Evans,” Mr. Harrison said in a low voice that nonetheless rumbled in the silence of the room. I didn’t ask you. I am asking your wife. The sentence was short, concise, and lethal. Mark fell silent instantly, his face flushed with shame at being reprimanded in front of his subordinates. Jessica, who was near Mark, also lowered her head, not daring to look up, pretending to adjust her watch. The situation had been reversed.
Now it was Mark who seemed small and helpless. Mr. Harrison turned back to me. His expression softened, creating a safe space for me to speak. Answer me, ma’am. Don’t be afraid. Tell me the truth. Mr. Harrison’s words seemed to give me a new strength. A strength I didn’t know where it came from. Perhaps from the spirit of my mother, who would not tolerate her daughter being treated unfairly.
I slowly raised my head. I saw Mark’s face filled with fear and anger. But this time, the fear I felt for him was not greater than the pain in my heart. I remembered the peaceful face of my mother in her grave that very afternoon. I remembered how much she wanted my happiness, and now in the house she had left me, I was being treated like a slave. It was enough. I could no longer hide this rot. With a trembling, but increasingly firm voice, I began to speak. Excuse me, sir, if my appearance has made you uncomfortable, I began, my voice. I’m not crying because I’m a crybaby or out of emotion.
I’m crying because my heart is broken, sir. I paused to catch my breath. My chest was tight. Everyone was looking at me. The guests who were eating merrily before had now put down their plates. The atmosphere was so quiet you could hear the ticking of the clock. 2 hours ago, just 2 hours, I returned from my mother’s funeral. My own mother passed away yesterday afternoon and she was buried just this afternoon. That confession was like a time bomb that exploded. Instantly, gasps of surprise were heard from several guests. They looked at each other with horrified faces. Some covered their mouths as they realized the cruelty of the situation they were celebrating.
They had been eating and laughing in a house of mourning on the day of the funeral. Guilt began to appear on the faces of Mark’s colleagues. They felt deceived as Mark had not informed them of my mother’s death. Jessica seemed the most uneasy. She slowly backed away trying to get out of the spotlight. Her face was pale. Realizing the social impact of the event, I continued my story without paying attention to their reactions. While I still had the courage, my husband Mark forced me to go ahead with this party. He said my mother’s death was not important, that life must go on, and that his promotion was more valuable than my period of mourning.
He ordered me to dry my tears, cook all this food, and serve his friends with a smile, as if nothing had happened. The dirt on my mother’s grave is still fresh, sir. The chrysanthemums on her grave haven’t even begun to wilt. But here, in this house, the music is blasting, and I am forbidden to be sad. My tears started to flow again, but this time I let them run while holding my head high. I had verbalized the truth that had been suppressed by my husband’s pride. Mark looked as if he had been struck by lightning. He opened his mouth to deny it, but no sound came out.
He realized he was finished. All eyes were now on him, filled with disgust and disbelief. The same colleagues who had praised him earlier now looked at him like a monster. How could a man be so cruel to his wife? How could he celebrate a party right after burying his mother-in-law? The reputation Mark had built over the years crumbled in an instant. Mr. Harrison listened to my entire story without blinking. His face slowly changed from an impassive and authoritative expression. It now emanated extreme anger. His jaw tensed so much that the veins in his neck stood out. His right hand clenched into a tight fist at his side.
His face turned red with contained fury. He looked at Mark with a murderous glare. The calm leadership aura from before had vanished, replaced by the terrifying aura of a man witnessing an injustice before his very eyes. Mr. Harrison approached Mark. Now the distance between them was minimal. Mark backed away step by step until his back hit the wall. He was cornered with no escape. Mr. Harrison pointed at Mark’s face just inches from his nose. His voice was no longer low, but boomed through the room, making the window panes tremble. Mr. Evans, is what your wife says true? You held a promotion party on your mother-in-law’s grave on the same day your wife lost her mother.
The shout was so loud that Jessica flinched and dropped her purse. Mark was trembling violently, his knees weak. He tried to stammer an incoherent excuse. “No, sir. I just… this was planned a long time ago. It wasn’t my intention.” Those stupid excuses sounded even more pathetic to everyone’s ears. Mark tried to grab Mr. Harrison’s hand to plead for understanding, but Mr. Harrison snatched it away abruptly, as if Mark’s hand were something disgusting. Shut up, Mister. Harrison yelled again. I don’t need your excuses. I thought you were an upstanding and decent employee, but you’re nothing but a human being without a conscience. You have tormented your grieving wife to satisfy your pride and vanity.
You forced her to prepare a party before her tears had even dried. Mr. Harrison looked around the room at the guests who now bowed their heads in shame. And all of you have eaten and drunk heartily in a house of mourning. Where is your conscience? The guests remained silent. Shame and guilt struck them. The party had turned into a moral tribunal in an instant. The music had long been turned off. The laughter had vanished, replaced by a suffocating tension. I remained in my place, crying tears of relief, feeling that I had finally lifted that weight off my chest.
But I didn’t know yet that the real shock was about to begin. Mr. Harrison turned to look at Mark, who looked like a drowned rat. Mr. Harrison’s gaze suggested that for him, this was not just a moral issue. There was a personal anger in it. He took a deep breath, controlling his emotions before dropping the next atomic bomb that would destroy Mark’s life forever. “Mr. Evans,” Mr. Harrison said in an icy tone. “You may be proud of your new position. You may feel big in front of your friends, but you’ve forgotten one very important thing.” “Mister,” Harrison stepped closer again and whispered with a clarity that reached Mark’s ringing ears.
“You underestimated your mother-in-law. You thought she was just some ordinary person. She is not. Mr. Harrison smiled with disdain. A terrible smile. There’s something you should know, Mark. Everyone who’s anyone in this town knows perfectly well who your mother-in-law was. The one who just passed away. He paused dramatically, letting fear coarse through every nerve in Mark’s body. Everyone knows and respects her except you, her stupid son-in-law. Mark lifted his head. His eyes were wide with confusion and fear. He didn’t understand Mr. Harrison’s words. “My mother-in-law was just a retired teacher,” he thought. “What does she have to do with the business world?” But seeing Mr.
Harrison’s expression, Mark realized he had made a much bigger mistake than throwing an ill-timed party, a mistake he would regret for the rest of his life. Mr. Harrison’s last words hung in the air like a recent thunderclap, leaving a terrifying echo in the ears of everyone present. Mark, his mouth slightly a gape and blinking rapidly, seemed to be trying to process the information that had just entered his brain, but his arrogant logic refused to accept it. His face, previously pale, now showed an expression of pathetic confusion. He tried to force a small laugh, a dry sound that was extremely inappropriate amidst the suffocating tension. Gathering the last vestiges of his arrogance, Mark attempted to deny the reality presented to him.
He slowly shook his head and looked at Mr. Harrison with a foolish, condescending gaze, as if the president had just told a bad joke. Mark took a small step forward, an incredibly presumptuous act, as if trying to place himself on the same level as Mr. Harrison. With a voice that tried to sound as indifferent as possible, Mark said that Mr. Harrison must be mistaken or misinformed. Mark explained confidently that his mother-in-law, Mrs. Eleanor Vance, was just an ordinary old woman who lived off her late father’s modest pension. Mark even added with a mocking tone that Mrs. Vance used to grow vegetables in the backyard, wore old clothes, and often asked him for more money for her expenses.
In Mark’s eyes, Mrs. Vance was a burden, an old parasite with no value other than to annoy him. He was convinced that Mr. Harrison was coincidentally talking about someone else with the same name. Hearing Mark’s ramblings, which further denigrated the deceased, Mr. Harrison did not erupt in anger as before. This time, his reaction was much more frightening. He laughed, a short, cynical, and cold laugh that chilled the blood of everyone in the room. Mr. Harrison looked at Mark as one looks at a small disgusting insect that doesn’t know it’s about to be crushed. He began to walk slowly around Mark as if observing a defective exhibit.
The sound of mister Harrison’s footsteps on the tile floor echoed loudly in the silent room. The guests, including Jessica, held their breath, sensing that a monumental revelation was about to occur. Jessica, standing in a corner, began to feel uncomfortable. Her instincts told her she had bet on the wrong horse. Mr. Harrison stopped right in front of Mark, looking deep into his eyes. With a calm voice, but laden with force in every syllable, Mr. Harrison began to speak. He said that Mark’s ignorance demonstrated how blind his mind and eyes had been all this time. Mr. Harrison explained that Mrs. Vance had chosen a simple life away from luxury and had shunned public attention.
But he revealed that behind those modest clothes and those soil stained hands from the garden, Mrs. Vance was the brilliant mind behind the founding of the gigantic corporation for which Mark worked. She was the founder and the majority shareholder with absolute authority over the company’s direction. For years, Mrs. Vance had controlled the business from the shadows, allowing executives like Mr. Harrison to be the public face while she enjoyed a quiet life with her daughter. Mark stumbled backward as if he had been slapped by an invisible hand. His legs instantly gave way. His memory flashed back in time. He remembered how many times he had scolded Mrs.
Vance for trivial matters like the food being bland or the floor not being clean enough. He remembered the time he yelled at her when Mrs. Vance asked for money for her medicine when in reality if she had wanted to, she could have bought the entire hospital. He remembered how he had always boasted in front of Mrs. Vance about being the pillar of the family, bragging about his salary, which was nothing more than crumbs compared to his mother-in-law’s fortune. Extreme shame mixed with a paralyzing fear, began to take hold of him. He had been insulting the boss of his boss, the owner of the throne to which he begged for his livelihood.