“Why didn’t you give me all the money today?” Gábor asked, staring at his wife in confusion.

A cruel, lying smile shattered trust.
Stories
“Why didn’t you give me the money today?” Gábor asked his wife in confusion.

“Trust me, you’ll love it, little one. You can’t get better Transformers than this in this store,” a male voice filtered through from the other side of the shelf.

Katalin was picking out children’s socks and had already put a few pairs in her basket when a familiar voice from the next row caught her ear. It was her husband speaking. She froze for a moment, then instinctively began to listen.

Through the gaps in the shelves crowded with toys, she saw Gábor. In his hand he was holding an expensive robot figure — exactly the kind their four-year-old son, Márk, had long dreamed of. Next to Gábor stood a woman in her thirties, whom Katalin did not know. The woman was holding the hand of a little boy who was about three years old.

“You’re so attentive to us,” the woman said, then kissed Gábor’s cheek softly and intimately. “Thank you.”

 

That kiss wasn’t like a simple thank you. It lasted too long, it seemed too natural. There was a familiarity to it, a tenderness, an old closeness.

“Anything for you and Levente,” Gábor replied, while lovingly stroking the little boy’s hair.

Katalin stepped back, almost pressing herself into the corner, trying to catch her breath. The night before, Gábor had refused to buy new shoes for Márk, even though the child had been begging for them for a month.

“Money doesn’t grow on trees,” he said sternly to his son. “Your old shoes are still usable. Don’t keep whining.”

Now, with a smile and without a second thought, he would have spent about 32,000 forints on a stranger’s little boy’s toy.

Katalin couldn’t bear to look any further. She hurried towards the door, leaving the basket with the socks behind. The envelope with the salary was lying in her coat pocket: 360,000 forints. She was supposed to give her husband seventy percent of it that very evening, as she had always done for the past four years. This was what they had agreed upon after the wedding: Gábor would manage the family treasury, he would decide on the expenses, he would distribute the money. At the time, he had persuaded Katalin that “in a family, the man should be in control.”

Gábor arrived home at the usual time in the evening. He kissed Katalin briefly on the forehead, played with Márk for a few minutes, and then settled down comfortably in front of the TV.

“What was in there today?” Katalin asked as she took out the envelope.

“Nothing special. The management has tired me out again with their stupid expectations,” Gábor replied, but he didn’t take his eyes off the screen.

Katalin didn’t give him the usual 260,000 forints, but only 252,000. Gábor immediately counted the banknotes and then frowned.

— Eight thousand are missing.

— I bought Mark some things to eat. He needs vitamins.

“Next time, tell me in advance,” Gábor grumbled, putting the money in his wallet. “I don’t like it when unexpected items overwhelm the budget.”

— Gábor, what will happen to Márk’s shoes? It’s October, the rains are coming soon.

“We’ll buy it this weekend. I told you, didn’t I? It’ll be done, don’t worry.”

— And the coat? He can barely button last year’s.

“I’ll take care of the coat too. Don’t worry, everything will be fine. You know I’m not talking nonsense.”

Katalin just nodded. Meanwhile, she knew exactly that her money had long since gone elsewhere. To that little boy in the store. “For Levente.”

— Oh, and one more thing — Gábor noted in an indifferent tone. — They’re organizing a collection at work for Réka Viktorna. She’s raising her child alone, it’s not easy for her. It’s her birthday soon.

Hearing the name Réka sent a sharp pain through Katalin’s chest. She immediately saw the woman’s face, the gentle kiss, the natural closeness. It didn’t look at all like they were trying to show some consideration to a colleague in need.

“How much do you think?” he asked, trying to sound calm.

— About twenty to twenty-eight thousand forints. We want something normal as a gift. Let’s say a chain or earrings.

Twenty-eight thousand spent on a “colleague’s” jewelry, but eight thousand on your own son’s vitamins is an unpleasant surprise.

“Take it out of the common money,” said Katalin.

— I already took it out yesterday. As a down payment, so to speak.

She spent the evening in almost complete silence. She furtively watched her husband, who occasionally looked into his phone and wrote messages to someone. After a while, Gábor noticed her gaze and hung up the phone in annoyance.

“You’re acting very strange today,” he said, slightly irritated. “Did something happen? A problem at work?”

“I’m just tired. Autumn fatigue, nothing more.”

“Take something calming. Catnip or something. You look like a storm is about to break out.”

“It’s truly touching that you’re so worried about me,” Katalin said with bitter mockery.

“Come on, honey,” Gábor waved and turned back to his phone.

The next day, Katalin asked for time off from work and went to Gábor’s office. She sat on a bench in the park across the street, watching the entrance from there. At six o’clock sharp, Gábor left the building. Not alone. The same woman he had seen in the toy store was walking beside him. They walked hand in hand to the café across the street.

Katalin watched them through the window. They had dinner, they laughed, Réka touched Gábor’s hand several times. The man showed her something on his phone, and she even clapped her hands in joy. When they later stepped out into the street, Gábor said goodbye to her with a long kiss — not on her cheek, but on her mouth.

At that point, there was no longer any doubt.

That evening, Katalin took Márk to her mother’s. She said she had to take care of an urgent work matter.

“You’ll stay with Grandma until tomorrow, my dear,” he explained to his son. “And Mom has something important to do at Aunt Eszter’s.”

“Aren’t you going to look for me?” asked Mark.

Catherine was silent for a moment.

“Dad… you probably won’t even notice,” he finally said honestly.

Eszter opened the door with tear-filled eyes and messy hair.

“Come in quickly. I’m just moaning about my own miserable life,” he said, hugging his girlfriend tightly. “It seems we’ve both been in trouble.”

“What happened to you?”

— That damn András. It turns out he’s been with someone for six months. Today he announced he was moving in with her. He said that woman understood him, and I was supposedly just arguing with her.

They sat in the kitchen. They drank strong tea, into which Eszter poured a little cognac. Katalin told them in detail what she had seen the previous day in the shop, and then at the café.

— Men… are all vile pigs — Eszter concluded as she refilled the glasses. — But please, Katka, don’t rush. Think it over with a cool head. There’s the child, the apartment, the money, your job isn’t such that you can handle everything without any problems… Isn’t it possible that we should try to fix it? Talk to him?

“Why should I fix what he destroyed?” Katalin asked quietly. “Did I ruin anything?”

— No, of course not. That’s not what I meant. Just… look at the practical side. Rent, livelihood, Márk’s future…

— What kind of future? For my son to watch his father support another woman and her child from his mother’s salary?

“Maybe it’s just some temporary madness,” Eszter tried uncertainly. “A midlife crisis, something like that.”

Katalin looked at him sadly.

— Eszter… this is not a crisis. This is a different family.

Over the next month, Katalin watched, listened, and in the meantime, she thought over and over again about what she could do. Gábor became noticeably more cautious: he referred to overtime less often, and came home late less often. However, his meetings with Réka did not stop, he just organized them more skillfully. They mostly met at lunchtime. At home, he continued to try to play the caring husband and father, although he was less and less successful at this.

“So, how’s school going?” he asked Márk once during dinner.

The little boy looked at him with wide eyes.

“Dad, I’m going to kindergarten.”

— Yeah, of course. To kindergarten. So what’s going on there?

— Good. And when will you buy me a bike?

— In winter? What kind of bike do you want in winter? Wait for summer.

“But you promised me for my birthday…”

“I promised, yes, I remember. We’ll buy it, you’ll definitely get it.”

Katalin listened to them silently. Márk’s birthday was three months earlier.

Their rented, two-room apartment cost 120,000 forints per month. After four years of marriage, they couldn’t even save up the first installment for a home of their own. Gábor spent everything that came into their joint pocket.

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“There is no misunderstanding here, Anna,” Katalin declared arrogantly, the family stared at Anna mockingly.
The haughty scene is deeply humiliating and disturbing.

The young man behind the reception desk adjusted his tie and then ran his finger across the tablet screen again. The light from the desk lamp fell right on his badge: Gergő. Soft saxophone music was playing in the lobby, and the smell of expensive perfume and the damp autumn evening mixed from the cloakroom.

“Look at it again, please,” I said, trying my best to look calm. “It should be for the name Kovacs. For five people. We’re celebrating my husband’s big business deal.”

Gergő smiled regretfully, but he didn’t let go of the tablet.

– I see the reservation, Ms. Anna. However, the table is only for four people. It lists Peter, Ms. Katalin, and two other ladies. They entered the room about ten minutes ago. Unfortunately, I cannot let you in without confirmation, we take this very strictly.

I took out my phone. Peter’s message from two hours earlier was flashing on the screen: “I sent the address. Don’t be late, mom doesn’t like to wait.”

 

“Anna? What are you doing here?”

I would have recognized this drawn-out, slightly nasal speech out of a thousand. I turned slowly. Katalin was standing by the mirrored column. Perfectly cut hair, stiff tweed suit, thick gold chain around her neck. She looked me up and down as if she were at least a head taller than me, even though we were exactly the same height.

Behind him, Péter was stomping around. He was nervously fiddling with the buttons on his jacket, his gaze darting somewhere towards the bar. A little further away, his sisters, Eszter and Dóra, were standing. Eszter immediately nudged Dóra, and then they both stared at me with undisguised curiosity, with a barely concealed sneer at the corner of their mouths.

“Good evening, Katalin,” I said, slipping my phone back into my bag. “It seems there was a misunderstanding with the reservation. According to Gergő, the table is only reserved for four people.”

My mother-in-law stepped closer. A strong, heavy scent wafted around her, a clove-like, suffocating perfume.

– There is no misunderstanding here, Annácska. I called the store manager myself this morning and asked them to adjust the number of guests.

He said it as casually as if he were just talking about buying a liter of milk. Peter shifted from one foot to the other behind him, but still didn’t look at me.

“Change it?” I felt something slowly boil inside me. “Peter invited me to this dinner. He said we were celebrating his first big contract.”

“Come on, don’t do it,” Katalin grimaced, as if I’d said something particularly stupid. “This is a family occasion. There are people here who understand the effort it takes to build a serious business. Peter needs to let me out among his own people right now. You’d just be awkward here. It’s too fancy, the menu too complicated. Why torture yourself?”

He paused for a moment and looked at my clothes.

“Your name is not on the list, go home,” he added with a half-smile. “Order yourself a pizza, watch a series. Don’t ruin Detective Péter’s evening with that offended face of yours.”

Eszter couldn’t take it anymore, she giggled, hiding behind her palm.

“Anna, really,” Dora said, taking a step towards me. “A portion of salad here costs as much as your boots. You’d spend the whole evening just calculating how many weeks of shopping you’d get out of the prices, and then you’d sigh heavily. It’d be better if you went home and rest.”

I looked at my husband.

“Peter?” I said softly. “Don’t you want to say anything?”

He winced as if cold water had suddenly been poured on his neck. He looked first at his mother, then at his sisters, and finally at me. His face began to burn in ugly red spots.

“Anna… well, Mom really has everything ordered,” he muttered, putting his hands in his trouser pockets. “Let’s not make a scene in front of so many people, okay? I’ll order you something delicious tomorrow, and we’ll sit down together. Go home now, okay? There’s going to be traffic jams soon.”

That was it. It was that simple. We had been together for five years. For five years, I listened to her complain about unfair bosses, how she was always being pushed aside, and how she never got what she deserved. And when she decided to start her own business, I spent nights hunched over her papers, recalculating her budgets, negotiating with suppliers, saving what I could. And now I should have gone home and eaten pizza so I wouldn’t ruin their holiday.

Katalin could never accept it. I came from a simple family, graduated from a rural finance college, and then moved to Budapest. My mother-in-law, on the other hand, always put her own family on a completely different shelf.

Katalin could never accept it.

I came from a simple family, graduated from a rural finance college, and then moved to Budapest with two suitcases and exactly enough money to survive one month if I skipped dinners.

Meanwhile, Katalin talked about her family name like it belonged on old castle walls.

She loved reminding everyone that her grandfather had once owned factories before the political changes.

That their family “used to matter.”

And somehow, in her mind, my background permanently disqualified me from ever truly belonging beside her son.

At first, Péter defended me.

Or at least I thought he did.

Back then, small humiliations arrived disguised as jokes.

“Anna is adorable,” Katalin would laugh at dinner. “She still gets excited over discount grocery coupons.”

Or:

“You can always tell who didn’t grow up around culture.”

Péter usually smiled awkwardly and changed the subject.

I told myself compromise was normal in families.

That love meant patience.

But patience becomes dangerous when it slowly teaches people they can disrespect you without consequences.

Standing there in the luxury restaurant lobby while his mother publicly erased me from the reservation…

I finally saw the full shape of my marriage clearly.

Not partnership.

Performance.

And I was only welcome as long as I stayed small enough not to embarrass them.

The receptionist looked deeply uncomfortable now.

Nearby guests pretended not to stare while absolutely staring.

Péter rubbed his forehead anxiously.

“Anna, please…”

Katalin crossed her arms triumphantly.

“There’s no reason to be dramatic. Mature women know when they’re not suited for certain environments.”

Something inside me went completely calm.

Not emotional.

Not wounded.

Clear.

I slowly removed the envelope from my handbag.

Thick.

Cream-colored.

Péter frowned immediately.

“What’s that?”

I looked directly at him.

“The contract.”

His face changed instantly.

Because unlike his family, Péter knew exactly which contract I meant.

Three months earlier, his struggling logistics startup stood on the edge of collapse.

Suppliers unpaid.

Debt mounting.

Payroll delayed twice.

And while Katalin bragged publicly about her son becoming “a major businessman,” the company quietly survived because of me.

Not emotionally.

Financially.

I was the one who spent six months rebuilding his financial forecasts.

The one who negotiated payment schedules.

The one who connected him with my former university professor now working at a regional investment fund.

Tonight’s dinner?

The “major business deal” they were celebrating?

It existed because I arranged the meeting.

Péter stared at the envelope with panic rising visibly across his face.

“Anna…”

I opened it carefully.

Then removed the signed investment agreement.

Eight hundred million forints.

Enough to save his company entirely.

Katalin’s confident expression flickered slightly.

“What is that?” she asked sharply.

I looked at her politely.

“The reason your son still has a business.”

Silence hit the lobby instantly.

Real silence.

Péter stepped forward quickly.

“Anna, let’s talk privately.”

“No,” I answered calmly.

“You wanted me excluded publicly. Let’s stay public.”

Eszter and Dóra stopped smiling completely now.

I handed the top page directly to the receptionist.

“Could you please read the investor name aloud?”

The poor young man blinked nervously.

Then glanced down.

“Uh… Central Horizon Development Group.”

Katalin frowned.

“That’s one of the largest investment firms in the country.”

“Yes,” I replied softly.

“And their managing director happens to be my former professor.”

Péter closed his eyes briefly.

Because now everyone understood.

Not only was I invited to the dinner—

I was the reason it existed.

Katalin recovered first.

“Well,” she said stiffly, “that still doesn’t change the fact this evening was intended for close family.”

I almost admired the desperation.

Almost.

Then I reached into my bag again.

This time I removed a blue folder.

Péter’s expression turned white immediately.

Because he recognized that too.

The original business restructuring proposal.

Every page filled with my handwriting.

My calculations.

My corrections.

My strategy.

Without it, his company would have gone bankrupt before spring.

I handed the folder to him quietly.

“You should probably continue this celebration without me.”

Péter grabbed my wrist immediately.

“Don’t do this.”

For the first time all evening, his voice sounded genuinely afraid.

I looked down at his hand.

Then back at him.

“When exactly were you planning to tell your family the truth?” I asked softly.

He said nothing.

That answer was enough.

Katalin scoffed lightly.

“Oh please. She’s exaggerating her role.”

I turned toward her slowly.

“Really?”

Then I looked directly at Péter.

“Who prepared your debt restructuring model?”

Silence.

“Who found your investors?”

More silence.

“Who spent four nights rebuilding your logistics forecast after your CFO resigned?”

Péter’s face burned deep red now.

Because everyone in the lobby could see the answer.

Dóra whispered quietly:

“Peter… is that true?”

He still couldn’t speak.

And suddenly the entire power balance shifted.

Because wealthy people often mistake polish for competence.

Until actual competence leaves the room.

Katalin’s voice sharpened.

“You’re trying to humiliate my son.”

“No,” I answered calmly.

“I’m refusing to disappear so you can.”

The words landed like broken glass.

The receptionist stared down very intensely at his desk trying not to exist.

A waiter nearby froze completely holding a tray of wine glasses.

Péter stepped closer again.

“Anna, please. Mom went too far. I know that. But don’t destroy everything over one stupid dinner.”

I looked at him sadly.

“One stupid dinner?”

My throat tightened despite myself.

“You stood there while your mother treated me like I was too embarrassing to sit beside you.”

His eyes filled with panic now because he finally understood.

This wasn’t about the restaurant anymore.

This was the moment something ended.

Katalin suddenly laughed sharply.

“Oh, for God’s sake. Stop acting like a martyr. Relationships require sacrifice.”

I turned toward her fully.

“You’re right.”

Then smiled politely.

“So I’m sacrificing this one.”

Péter physically flinched.

I gently removed my wedding ring.

Five years.

Five years reduced to cold metal resting quietly in my palm.

The entire lobby watched silently.

Even Katalin looked briefly shaken now.

Not guilty.

Just surprised I finally stopped tolerating her.

I placed the ring carefully into Péter’s hand.

“You once told me you loved how hard I worked,” I said softly.

His breathing became uneven.

“I thought that meant you respected me.”

“Anna—”

“But you only respected what I could do for you.”

Tears gathered in his eyes instantly.

Too late.

Much too late.

I picked up my handbag calmly.

Then looked once more at the elegant restaurant entrance where I was apparently too ordinary to belong.

Funny.

Because without me, none of them would’ve been celebrating anything inside tonight.

As I turned toward the exit, Katalin suddenly spoke again.

“You’ll regret throwing this away.”

I stopped.

Then looked back at her one final time.

“No,” I said quietly.

“I regret how long I begged people to value me after they already decided not to.”

And for the first time since entering that restaurant—

nobody had another word to say.

I walked out into the cold Budapest evening alone.

The city lights blurred softly against wet pavement while autumn wind moved through the streets around me.

Behind me, inside the expensive restaurant, waited a man too weak to defend me and a family too arrogant to deserve me.

Ahead of me?

Silence.

Freedom.

And a life no longer built around earning a seat at someone else’s table.

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