When Martha returns from a weekend away, she’s horrified to find her MIL, Gloria, has destroyed her daughter’s cherished flowerbed, replacing it with tacky garden gnomes. Furious but composed, Martha hatches a clever plan to teach her a lesson she’ll never forget.
My daughter Amy was my whole world from the moment she was born. After her father walked out when she was two, it was just the two of us against the world until Stephen came along.
He brought love, stability, and, unfortunately, his mother Gloria into our lives.
From the day I married her son, she made her disapproval of me and Amy crystal clear with comments like, “You don’t need a woman with baggage” or “Why bother buying gifts for a kid who isn’t yours?”
Stephen would always defend us, bless him. “Amy is my daughter, Mother,” he’d say firmly. “And Martha is my wife. That makes them family.”
But Gloria would just wave her hand dismissively, as if shooing away an annoying fly.
“You should focus on having your own kids, Stephen,” she’d remark. “I want grandbabies, not step-grandchildren, or whatever the girl is.”
Sometimes these conversations got heated, but Stephen could never get her to see reason. And if I so much as suggested we all calm down, Gloria would tell me it was a family matter and I should keep out of it.
It was never easy, but I tried to be civil and keep the peace for two years. Then Gloria did something unforgivable.
Amy’s always been passionate about gardening. On her 12th birthday, Stephen and I gave her a couple of plants and set aside a plot for her to create her own garden. She said it was the best gift she’d ever received.
She spent months planning and building her flowerbed. You should have seen her face light up when the first tulips bloomed.
That garden wasn’t just dirt and flowers; it was her pride and joy. She saved up her allowance to buy the exact flowers she wanted, carefully researching which ones would grow best in our climate.
“Mom, look!” she’d exclaim every morning, dragging me out to see new growth. “The daffodils are starting to sprout!”
She knew the name of every single flower, could tell you exactly when they’d bloom, and what kind of care they needed.
Some kids her age were obsessed with video games or social media, but my Amy found her joy in the simple miracle of watching things grow.
When she showed the garden to Gloria, she stared down her nose at Amy’s flowers and sniffed.
“I suppose it suits you to dig in the dirt,” she said before swiftly marching inside.
Amy frowned. “What does that mean, Mom?”
I forced myself to smile. “I think she means she can tell how much joy gardening gives you, sweetheart.”
Amy didn’t seem totally convinced, but she shrugged and continued mulching her garden. I winked at her and followed Gloria inside.
Gloria had offered to look after our dog while we were away for the weekend and I had to show her where we kept his food, and hopefully resist the urge to give her a piece of my mind.
The weekend was perfect. Amy collected pretty rocks, Stephen grilled marshmallows, and I forgot all about Gloria.
We hiked trails surrounded by wildflowers, and Amy identified every single one, rattling off facts about their growing patterns and preferred conditions. She even took notes in her little journal, planning what she might add to her flowerbed back home.
On the way home, we dropped Amy off at my mom’s for some quality time with Grandma. For that reason alone, she was spared the sight of what Gloria did to her garden.
My stomach lurched when I saw our yard. Amy’s beautiful flowerbed was gone, replaced by an army of the ugliest garden gnomes I’d ever seen.
They grinned at me with their creepy ceramic faces, mocking everything my daughter had worked for. The soil had been completely cleared, Amy’s carefully arranged flowers tossed aside like weeds.
Even the handpainted stones she’d used to border the bed were gone.
I stormed into the house with Stephen on my heels.
“Gloria!” I called out, fighting to keep my voice steady. “What have you done to Amy’s flowerbed?”
She appeared in the hall, wearing that familiar smug smile, perfectly coiffed hair gleaming in the afternoon sun.
“Oh, Martha! Don’t you just love the gnomes? Flowers only bloom in summer, and I thought the garden needed year-round decorations.”
“That was Amy’s flowerbed, Mom! How could you do this to her?” Stephen snapped.