The shoes were exactly my style—wide-heeled, glossy, elegant—but there was something heavier than the gift itself pressing on me as I held them. Arthur looked thrilled, practically beaming as he watched me examine the birthday surprise, while Debbie, his mother, leaned back in her chair with that smug little half-smile that had become all too familiar. She waved off my compliment with a sharp little jab disguised as playful banter. “I thought you might want something nice for once.
You always wear such… practical shoes.” It was subtle, but unmistakable—the underlying implication that my usual choices, my comfort, my aesthetic, were somehow lacking, unworthy, or even unfit in Debbie’s eyes. I forced a polite smile, tucking the comment away in the corner of my mind like a pin that pricked but didn’t immediately draw blood. Yet every encounter with Debbie seemed to involve a pin, carefully placed, and the collection was starting to bruise. I looked at Arthur, hoping for some validation, but he just shrugged, his way of silently telling me to let it slide, to keep the peace, to remember that “she’s just set in her ways,” as he always said.