“So, show me your country bumpkin!” the mother smirked. But seeing Vicky, she fell silent.

«Well, go on then, show me your rustic setup!» Irene smirks as she steps across the threshold of the spacious, sun‑drenched hallway. But the sight of Vicky makes her fall silent.

«You work as a chief accountant?» Irene looks the girl up and down, not hiding her shock. «I thought people in the countryside only knew how to milk cows,» she says, seeing a slim, beautiful woman in an immaculate sand‑coloured linen suit, perfect hair, and the faint, expensive scent of a high‑end perfume.

Vicky gives a soft smile and takes her mother‑in‑law’s lightweight designer handbag. There is no sycophancy in her movements, nor any offence at the barb.

«Yes, I can milk cows too, Irene. Please, come in and take off your shoes. Andrew is just finishing a work call and will join us. The tea is already brewed.»

Irene has lived all her life in London, in a historic district where property prices start at seven figures. To her, the word «village» means dirt, decay, endless hard labour and cultural isolation. When her only, pampered son Andrew announced he was marrying a girl from the sticks and they were moving to a modern eco‑settlement a hundred kilometres from the capital, she was quietly horrified. She pictured a daughter‑in‑law in a stretched jumper, hands roughened by menial work, the permanent smell of manure, and a worldview limited to gossip at the local shop.

Reality hits her stereotypes like a hammer. The hallway doesn’t smell of damp but of fresh baking, snake plants, and an expensive diffuser with notes of sandalwood and cedar. The solid oak floors gleam, stylish posters of architectural sketches hang on the walls, and a smart speaker quietly plays jazz in the corner. And Vicky herself… She is twenty‑eight and looks like a model from a country‑living magazine: a toned figure, well‑cared‑for hands with a neat nude manicure, and a calm, assured gaze from her brown eyes that reveals intelligence and self‑possession.

«You have… unexpectedly clean here,» Irene says grudgingly, walking into the living room and perching on the edge of the beige sofa, afraid to crease her perfect pencil skirt.

«We try,» Vicky replies, pouring aromatic herbal tea into thin porcelain cups. «Andrew mentioned you like it with bergamot. I added a little fresh mint and thyme from my own garden. It’s calming after the journey.»

Irene takes a sip. The tea is superb, balanced and wonderfully flavourful. She tries to find a fault, some detail that will betray her daughter‑in‑law’s «simplicity» and restore her own sense of control.

«Andrew wrote that you handle the accounts of a large agricultural firm in London, working remotely,» Irene begins, setting her cup down with a delicate clink. «Isn’t it hard to combine such intellectual work with… this?» She waves vaguely towards the panoramic window, beyond which lie neat vegetable beds, a greenhouse, and a small wooden shed that looks, however, like a film set for a farming scene.

«Actually, they complement each other perfectly,» Vicky replies calmly, sitting opposite. «Working remotely lets me manage the company’s financial flows without losing touch with the real economy. I see how theoretical tax changes affect real farms. Besides, I keep the management accounts for our small homestead too. It’s excellent practice: from tracking feed costs to depreciation of machinery. The scale is different, but the principles are the same.»

Irene snorts. She is not used to being lectured, especially by a twenty‑eight‑year‑old «country girl». She decides to change tack and hit a sore point – finances, where she herself recently suffered a setback.

«By the way, since you’re such an expert,» she begins challengingly, narrowing her eyes, «maybe you can help? I’m trying to claim property tax relief on a new flat I bought to rent out, but those new HMRC systems keep throwing up errors. They were rude at the tax office, said my documents weren’t the right format, that my return was filled out incorrectly under the new 2026 rules. I’ve redone it three times already.»

Vicky doesn’t bat an eyelid. She doesn’t gloat or sneer. She simply pulls a slim tablet from her handbag, puts on a pair of stylish lightweight reading glasses, and reaches out.

«Let’s have a look. It’s probably the scan format, or maybe the P60 isn’t linked properly in the database, or you selected the wrong relief code in the new version of your personal account. Show me the documents on your phone.»

In ten minutes, Vicky not only finds the error in an old Land Registry scan, but remotely, through her professional access and personal account, she generates a correct application. She explains every step to Irene in plain, supremely professional language, without jargon but without patronising.

«There, the application is submitted. The status will update within three working days. If you have questions, call me – I’m in direct contact with the inspector; we know each other from professional conferences.»

Irene is stunned. She expected confusion, ignorance, or worse – a pretence of understanding. Instead, she faces a competent, cool‑headed professional who solved her problem in the time it took to brew tea.

But stereotypes die hard. When Andrew returns, hugs his mother and kisses his wife, they sit down to dinner. The conversation turns to food.

«This baked cheesecake is extraordinary,» Irene remarks, tasting the dish. «Not like the ones in our city supermarkets – all starch and palm oil.»

«That’s from our cow, Daisy,» Andrew smiles, pouring his mother a glass of wine. «Vicky oversees the milk quality and the process herself.»

Irene raises an eyebrow, looking at her daughter‑in‑law’s immaculate manicure and clean blouse.

«Really? And you yourself… milk her?»

Vicky calmly puts down her fork and wipes her mouth with a napkin.

«Yes. In the morning, before my first work calls, it’s my meditation. Would you like to see?»

Irene inwardly smirks. «Of course, now she’ll put on some muddy wellies, get covered in dung, and realise this isn’t her level, that she’s pretending.» Out of curiosity and a hint of schadenfreude, she agrees.

They go outside. The evening sun gilds the tops of the birch trees; the air is fresh and crisp. Vicky doesn’t put on rough, battered boots. She takes clean, stylish short wellies from the hallway that match her jeans perfectly, and ties a silk scarf over her head, turning it into an elegant accessory rather than a sign of poverty.

The barn is surprisingly clean. It doesn’t smell of manure, only fresh hay, warm milk, and cleanliness. Daisy, a large, glossy Simmental cow, moos in greeting when she sees her owner.

Vicky approaches her, strokes her broad back gently, murmuring something softly. Her movements are economical, confident, and full of respect for the animal. She doesn’t flinch, but she doesn’t turn the process into dirty work either. Everything is thought out: a clean enamel bucket, prepared wipes, a modern compact milking machine she connects with the skill of a practised engineer.

«You see, Irene,» Vicky says without turning, her calm voice echoing off the wooden walls, «there’s nothing demeaning about the countryside. There’s only work and result. A cow must be respected, understood – then she gives good milk. And good milk means health and a quality product I can control from start to finish. It’s the same with a company’s balance sheet: if you respect every figure, know where it comes from, the accounts will be flawless. City and countryside aren’t enemies. They’re just different parts of the same whole.»

Irene stands in the doorway and watches. She doesn’t see a «country bumpkin»; she sees harmony. A woman who doesn’t divide the world into «black» and «white», «dirty» and «clean», but draws the best from any circumstance. Vicky is strong. Not that strained, coarse strength Irene attributed to rural people, but an inner, core strength that lets you be both a chief accountant with a high income and a homemaker able to supply your family with real, living produce.

When they return inside, Vicky washes her hands, and they smell not of manure but of coal‑tar soap and fresh, sweet milk. She sets a jug of fresh milk on the table and a dish of thick, rich sour cream.

«Help yourself,» she offers.

Irene tries the sour cream. It’s thick, with that forgotten taste of childhood that can’t be bought in a plastic tub with a bright «farm product» label. This is the taste of real, living work.

«It really is delicious,» Irene admits quietly, and her voice holds notes that have been absent since Andrew’s childhood: genuine admiration.

Andrew wraps his arm around Vicky’s shoulders, and the gesture holds so much tenderness, pride, and gratitude that Irene’s heart tightens. She suddenly understands that her son hasn’t just «survived» in the countryside, as she feared. He has flourished. He found a woman who is his partner in everything: intellectual debates, daily life, creating comfort and meaning. She doesn’t pull him down; she gives him a foundation that no penthouse in central London could provide.

That evening, as she prepares to leave, Irene lingers in the hallway. Vicky helps her with her light coat.

«Vicky,» Irene begins, and her voice wavers treacherously. She clears her throat, restoring her usual composure, but her eyes remain soft. «I… I was wrong. About the countryside. And about you. Forgive me for my foolishness and prejudice.»

Vicky smiles gently, adjusting the collar of her mother‑in‑law’s coat. In that simple gesture there is more dignity than any high fashion.

«It’s fine, Irene. Stereotypes exist to be broken. Come and visit us again. Daisy sends her regards, and I promise to show you how we keep track of the courgette harvest in Excel. Trust me, it’s more gripping than any detective novel.»

Irene laughs. For the first time in years, the laughter is genuine, clear, free of arrogance, fear, or sarcasm.

«I will definitely come,» she says, stepping out onto the porch where her driver is waiting. «And I’ll bring those rental documents. In case the chief accountant is needed again.»

The car pulls away, carrying her towards the lights of the big city, which suddenly seems less cosy and safe than the warm, meaningful house behind her. And Vicky goes back inside, closes the door, hugs her husband, and looks out the window at the starry sky. She knows who she is. And in this life, there is no room for shame about her past or her present. She is the mistress of her own fate – and that is more than enough.

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;-) :| :x :twisted: :smile: :shock: :sad: :roll: :razz: :oops: :o :mrgreen: :lol: :idea: :grin: :evil: :cry: :cool: :arrow: :???: :?: :!:

“So, show me your country bumpkin!” the mother smirked. But seeing Vicky, she fell silent.
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