You’re Not the Mistress — You’re Just the Servant

Im not the lady of the houseIm the servant

Poppy, dear, just a little more of this marvelous ladys salad, my motherinlaw, Margaret Whitaker, said, her voice sweet as jam yet cutting like hot sauce, a sting of forced kindness.

I nodded silently, picking up the almost empty salad bowl. The womanmy husband Sams third cousin once removedshot me a glare that could have been aimed at a buzzing fly that had been circling my head for ten minutes.

I slipped through the kitchen, trying to be invisible. Today was Sams birthday, or rather, his family was celebrating his birthday in my flatthe flat I pay the mortgage on.

Laughter rippled from the lounge in choppy wavesthe deep bass of Uncle Jacks jokes, the sharp bark of his wifes laughter. Over it all rang Margarets confident, almost commanding tone. Sam was probably tucked in a corner, smiling tightly and nodding shyly.

I filled the bowl, topping it with a sprig of dill. My hands moved on autopilot while the number twenty kept looping in my mind. Twenty twenty million.

Yesterday evening, after getting the final confirmation email, I had crouched on the bathroom floor, hidden from everyone, and stared at my phone. The project Id shepherded for three yearshundreds of sleepless nights, endless negotiations, tears, and nearhopeless attemptshad been reduced to a single figure on a screen. Seven zeros. My freedom.

Where are you stuck? Margaret snapped impatiently. The guests are waiting!

I carried the bowl back into the hall. The party was in full swing.

Youre so slow, Poppy, my aunt, Georgina, teased, pushing her plate away. Youre like a turtle.

Sam flinched but stayed quiet. He hated any hint of a scene.

I set the salad on the table. Margaret, smoothing her immaculate hair, raised her voice so everyone could hear: Not everyone can be quick. Office work isnt housekeeping. You sit at a desk and go home. Here you have to think, hustle, and juggle.

She surveyed the guests with a triumphant glance. Everyone nodded. My cheeks flushed.

Reaching for an empty glass, I knocked a fork off the side. It clattered onto the floor.

Silence fell. For a heartbeat everyone staredten pairs of eyes from the fork to me.

Margaret burst out laughing, harsh and poisonous. See? I told you! Clumsy hands.

She turned to the woman beside her, kept the tone low but cutting, and added: I always told Sam, shes not his match. In this house youre the master, and she just a decorative piece. Bring, fetch, serve. Not the mistressjust the help.

Laughter rippled again, this time more malicious. Sam looked away, pretending to be engrossed in a napkin.

I lifted the fork, straightened my back, and for the first time that evening truly smiledgenuine, not forced.

They hadnt the slightest idea that the world built on my patience was about to crumble, and that my own was just beginning.

My smile seemed to knock them off balance. Their laughter snapped off as abruptly as it had begun. Margarets jaw froze, bewildered.

Instead of returning the fork to the table, I walked to the kitchen, dropped it in the sink, grabbed a clean glass, and poured myself a glass of cherry juicethe very brand Margaret dismissed as a frivolous luxury.

Glass in hand, I returned to the lounge and took the only free seatnext to Sam. He looked at me as if seeing me for the first time.

Poppy, hot drinks are cooling! Margaret snapped, her voice still edged with steel. You need to keep the guests supplied.

Im sure Sam can manage, I said, taking a small sip without turning my eyes away. Hes the head of the house. Let him prove it.

All eyes snapped to Sam. He went pale, then flushed, nervous, casting pleading glances between me and his mother.

I yes, of course, he stammered, stumbling toward the kitchen.

It was a tiny, sweet victory. The air grew heavy, thick.

Realising the direct attack had failed, Margaret shifted tactics. Weve decided to go to the country house in July, the whole family. A month, like always, to get some fresh air.

Poppy, youll need to start packing next week, move the supplies, get the house ready, she said as if it were already settled, as if my opinion didnt exist.

I set my glass down slowly. Sounds lovely, Margaret, but I have other plans this summer.

The words hung like ice cubes in summer heat.

What other plans? Sam returned with a tray of misshapen plates and steaming dishes. What are you dreaming up?

His voice trembled with irritation and confusion. My refusal sounded to him like a declaration of war.

Im not dreaming, I replied calmly, first meeting his gaze, then his mothers, now blazing with fury. I have business plans. Im buying a new flat.

A pause, letting the impact settle. This ones become far too cramped.

A deafening silence followed, broken first by Margarets short, cackling laugh. Shes buying? With what money, pray tell? A thirtyyear mortgage? Will she spend her whole life working on concrete walls?

Moms right, Poppy, Sam chimed in, seeking support, slamming his tray down so that sauce splattered the tablecloth. Stop this circus. Youre embarrassing us. What flat? Have you lost your mind?

I scanned the guests faceseach wore skeptical, disdainful looks, as if I were an empty seat that suddenly thought it mattered.

Why a mortgage? I asked, soft smile. No, I dont like debt. Im paying cash.

Uncle Jack, whod been silent, snorted. An inheritance, perhaps? Did some American millionaire aunt pass away?

The guests giggled, feeling once more like masters of the situation. Sure, you could say that, I replied, turning to Jack. Except the millionaire is me, and Im still alive.

I took a sip of juice, giving them time to process. Yesterday I sold my project. The one you all thought kept me chained to an office. The startup I built over three years. The deal? Twenty million pounds. The moneys already in my account. So yes, Im buying a flatmaybe even a seaside cottageso Im never cramped again.

A ringing hush fell over the room. Faces stretched, smiles vanished, exposing shock and bewilderment.

Sam stared, eyes wide, mouth open but silent. Margarets complexion faded, her mask crumbling before their eyes.

I stood, grabbed my purse from the chair. Sam, happy birthday. Heres my gift to you. Im moving out tomorrow. You and your family have a week to find new accommodation. Im selling this flat too.

I headed for the door. No sound reached my back; they were frozen.

At the doorway I turned for one last look. And Margaret, I said, voice steady, the help is exhausted and needs a break.

Six months later, I sit on the wide windowsill of my new flat. Beyond the floortoceiling glass, the evening city glittersalive, breathing, no longer hostile.

The glass clinks in my handstill cherry juice. On my lap rests a laptop with the blueprints of a new projectan architectural app already courting its first investors.

I work hard now, and it brings joy, because the work fills me instead of draining me.

For the first time in years I breathe fully. The constant tension that had shadowed me for years is gone. The habit of speaking softly, moving cautiously, guessing others moods has faded. I no longer feel like a guest in my own home.

After that birthday, Sams calls never stopped. He moved through stages: raging threats (Youll regret this! Youre nothing without me!), then nightly voice notes whining about how wonderful their past was. Listening, I felt only cold emptiness. His wonderful was built on my silence. The divorce was swift; he made no demands.

Margaret remained predictablecalling, demanding justice, shouting that Id stolen her son. Once she tried to grab my arm at the business centre where I lease office space. I simply walked past her, saying nothing.

Her power ended where my patience ran out.

Sometimes, in odd nostalgia, Id glance at Sams social media. The photos showed him back at his parents housesame room, same carpet, same scowl of perpetual grievance, as if the world were forever against him.

No more guests. No more celebrations.

A few weeks ago, returning from a meeting, I got a message from an unknown number: Hey Poppy, its Sam. Mum wants a salad recipe. She says she cant get it right. I stopped dead in the street, read it several times, then laughedgenuinely, not maliciously. The absurdity was the perfect epilogue to our story. They tried to destroy my family, to ruin me, and now they wanted a good salad.

I looked at the screen. In my new life, filled with exciting projects, respectful people, and quiet happiness, there was no room for old recipes or old grudges.

I blacklisted the number without a second thought, as if discarding a stray speck of dust.

Then I took a big gulp of juice. Sweet, with a faint bite. The taste of freedom. And it was glorious.

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