Meine Schwiegermutter buchte eine aufwendige Party in meinem Restaurant und ging ohne einen einzigen Cent hinaus. Ich schluckte den Verlust, um den Frieden zu wahren, aber ein paar Tage später kam sie mit ihren wohlhabenden Freunden zurück und tat so, als gehörte ihr das Haus.

For three seconds the room remained completely still, as if everyone had inhaled at once and forgotten how to breathe.

Evelyn stared at the invoice like it was written in a foreign language. Then she laughed—light and dismissive.

“Oh, sweetie,” she said, reaching with manicured fingers to slide the paper away. “This is business. We’ll handle it privately.”

I kept my hand firmly on the table, holding the invoice in place.
“We can handle it right now,” I said. My voice wasn’t loud, but it was steady enough for nearby guests to hear.

A silver-haired man leaned forward slightly. “Is there a problem?” he asked.

Evelyn’s cheeks tightened. “No. No, of course not,” she said quickly. Then she turned to me again, smiling tightly. “Claire, darling, you’re embarrassing me.”

“You embarrassed yourself when you told your guests you ‘practically own’ my restaurant and that I’m a servant.”

A few people shifted in their chairs. Someone cleared their throat. A woman in a red dress looked between us like she’d realized the real entertainment wasn’t the music.

Evelyn’s eyes flashed. “It was a joke,” she snapped, before smoothing her tone. “We’re family. These things get misunderstood.”

“Family doesn’t mean free,” I replied.

One of my servers walked past, shoulders stiff. My staff were clearly listening while pretending not to.

Evelyn leaned closer, lowering her voice. “You will regret this. Ethan will be furious.”

“I already spoke to Ethan,” I lied. I hadn’t yet—but I knew if I gave her any space, she would twist the situation.

Her eyes flicked toward the table. She straightened up, adopting the confident posture she used when taking control.

“Everyone,” she said brightly, “there seems to be a little confusion about internal accounting. My daughter-in-law is… very passionate.”

The silver-haired man didn’t smile. “Passionate isn’t the word I’d choose,” he said quietly, studying the invoice.

Another guest—Victoria Sloan, according to the reservation list—picked up the bill and scanned it.

“Forty-eight thousand?” she said, raising her eyebrows. “That doesn’t sound like confusion.”

Evelyn reached for the paper, but Victoria held it away.

“This is absurd,” Evelyn hissed. “Claire is exaggerating. She thinks she’s running an empire because she owns a small seafood place.”

I didn’t react. “It’s not a small place. It’s my livelihood. And you already hosted one unpaid event here earlier this week.”

That statement landed heavily. Several people turned toward Evelyn.

“Another event?” someone asked.

Evelyn hesitated. “It was… a family dinner. Nothing formal.”

Maya stepped beside me, composed and professional. “It was a private dining event,” she said. “Thirty-two guests. Full service. No deposit. No payment.”

Evelyn turned toward her sharply. “I don’t answer to you.”
“You don’t have to,” Maya replied calmly. “Our contract is with the host. The invoice is valid.”

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