On our eighth anniversary, my husband insisted that only I prepare a feast for thirty-eight guests, while he was tucked away at a hotel with the woman from his office. I smiled and said, “Of course,” and a few hours later I was at the airport, leaving thirty-eight covered plates lined up like a perfectly behaved secret. When those covers were lifted, the room finally learned who had been doing the smiling.

On our eighth anniversary, my husband ordered that only I prepare a feast for thirty-eight guests, while he was secretly with his mistress in a hotel.

I smiled and said, “Of course.” But that day, I was at the airport, leaving behind thirty-eight covered plates of food. When they opened them…

My name is Natalie. I’m thirty-three years old, and my mother-in-law asked me—just me—to prepare the anniversary party for my husband and me, eight years married. I reluctantly said, “I agree.” But after that, I got on a plane and left, leaving behind a chaotic party for them, my husband, and his mistress.

If you’ve ever spent a whole decade trying to please a family that isn’t your own, then this story is for you.

Before I tell you the full sequence of my actions, hit the like button and subscribe to the channel to start listening right now.

I’m a personal financial consultant, and my work is mostly done online at home. I only go out when a client needs support, which is also why my mother-in-law, Melody, thinks I’m unemployed or just doing part-time work. I don’t bother to explain.

On Sunday morning, exactly one week before the eighth anniversary of my marriage to Carter, I was polishing the gleaming granite in our kitchen in our home in Lansing, Michigan—where we moved five years ago—when the phone rang. The screen showed my mother-in-law’s name.

I hesitated before picking up, and her voice came through with that familiar tone—sweet, and pressuring at the same time.

“Natalie, I think you should host a really elegant evening for the eighth anniversary,” she said. “There’ll be about thirty-eight guests, including Carter’s partners. As for the menu, I’ll leave that to you, just as long as there’s nothing with soy like last time. Oh, and Carter said, ‘You’re not too busy this week, right?’”

I swallowed back a refusal, but only managed a strained smile she couldn’t see through the phone. “Yes,” I said. “I’ll prepare it.”

When the call ended, I sank down into a chair, still holding the mop. My breath caught.

Three years ago, at a party just like that, I had done everything myself—the menu, the shopping, the cooking, the arranging, the hosting—while Carter was “busy” meeting with his partners. I was hospitalized right after that party from exhaustion and hypoglycemia, but no one ever mentioned it afterward, as if it had never happened at all.

I set the mop down, stared at the table, and opened my laptop to draft a menu list. The FaceTime rang.

It was my mother, Rose, who lives in Portland, Oregon, where I grew up. Her face was still gentle, but her eyes brimmed with expectations, the way they always did when she thought she was teaching me what it meant to be “good.”

When I told her, briefly, about my mother-in-law’s request, she only laughed.

“Back in the day, I had to handle both sides of the family,” she said. “We women have to know how to manage, dear. That’s how you keep happiness.”

I nodded. But inside me was a vast emptiness, the kind that makes you feel like a room with all the furniture removed.

I wanted to ask, And what about me? Who keeps me?

But I stayed silent.

When I stepped into the backyard for air, Mrs. Marleene—our seventy-year-old neighbor who lived alone in the mid-century house next door—was watering her lavender. She saw me holding a notebook, my face a little dazed, and smirked.

“Another party, huh?” she said. “God, they must think you’re the head chef at the Ritz. I made some lemon sauce. Take it. At least every dish will taste a little more like you.”

I chuckled, took it, and walked back inside, but my heart sank as I crossed the threshold.

No one sees me as someone who needs love. Only as someone who must carry weight.

Hours later, while I was checking prices on Italian grilled cheese sandwiches, my phone flashed a message from Emily, my best friend, a travel guide who always seemed to be somewhere bright and far away.

“Is Carter home?” she asked.

“No,” I replied. “He’s at a coworker’s birthday.”

Seconds later, she sent a photo.

Carter, kissing a blonde woman at the front desk of the Hyatt Place Hotel in downtown Lansing.

That woman was no stranger.

She was Sierra—his secretary. Or, as I later learned her full name in black-and-white, Sierra Avery Lane.

My vision blurred. My hand dropped the phone onto the tile floor. I didn’t cry. I only felt my heart being squeezed tight, like someone had wrapped a cord around it and pulled.

I looked back at the menu list on my laptop. Italian salad. Honey-roasted chicken. Cheesecake. All of it to serve the man who had deceived me, and the family who always treated me like a silent accessory to Carter.

Quietly, I pulled out the trash bin, tore up every note, every handwritten menu line, and burned them in the backyard oven. In the crackle of burning paper, I clearly heard my own voice inside my head.

If you want a party, I’ll give you the last party of your life.

Monday morning, the Lansing sky was gray and still, as if it, too, knew something was about to change. I sat in my old moss-green Subaru parked outside the city library, clutching my phone, my finger sliding to Samuel Martinez in my contacts—a former client of mine, and also a private investigator whom I’d helped through financial trouble last year.

He’d once said something I never forgot.

No matter who it is, they leave a trace.

I pressed call. It rang only twice before his voice came low and brisk.

“Natalie. What’s wrong?”

I bit my lip. “I need your help,” I said softly. “It’s personal. Urgent.”