My stepdad Raymond demanded fresh-cooked meals every day, tossing out leftovers like a tyrant from the 1950s. Mom, once full of life, shrank under his control. After Dad died six years ago, she was lost—until Raymond, a charming professor, swept in with lunch dates and quick fixes. They married fast. I wanted to believe in him.
But when I visited six months later, Mom looked thinner, worn out. Raymond was cruel—once smashing a pan of lasagna because it was reheated. She was scared but trying to keep peace.
So, I stepped in. I cooked elaborate meals daily—pancakes, sushi, Beef Wellington—all made from leftovers. Raymond devoured them, bragged online, clueless.
One night, I told him the truth. Every meal he praised? Leftovers. He exploded, but I told him off for treating my mom like a servant and crushing her spirit.
We changed the locks that night. I took Mom out for dinner and reminded her she deserved more than fear. Months later, Raymond came begging. Mom smiled and said she had plans now—ones that didn’t include broken plates or broken trust.
She got her freedom. And for the first time in years, she truly looked alive.