Raising a Softy, Are You? — Why Did You Sign Him Up for Piano Lessons? Lydia Peterson breezed past her daughter-in-law, peeling off her gloves. — Hello, Lydia. Please come in. Always a pleasure to see you. Her sarcasm landed poorly. Lydia tossed her gloves on the side table and turned to Mary. — Kostya called me. He’s positively beaming — “I’m going to learn piano!” What is this nonsense? Is he a girl now? Mary closed the door gently, carefully, fighting the urge to scream. — It means your grandson will be learning music because he loves it. — Loves it, does he? — Lydia snorted as if Mary was completely out of her mind. — He’s six, he hasn’t a clue what he likes! It’s your job to guide him. He’s a boy, an heir, my grandson — and just who are you raising him to be? The mother-in-law strode into the kitchen, flicked the kettle on with the authority of a queen. Mary followed, jaw clenched so tight it hurt. — I’m raising a happy child. — You’re raising a weakling — a wet blanket! — Lydia squared herself. — Football, wrestling — that’s what he needs! Make him a man, not some… pianist! Mary leaned against the doorframe and counted to five. It didn’t help. — Kostya asked himself. He loves music. — Loves it, ha! — Lydia waved her hand. — Sergey was playing hockey at his age! And your boy? He’ll be playing scales? Shameful! Something snapped inside Mary. She stepped forward. — Are you finished? — Not by a long shot! I’ve wanted to say— — Well, I’ve wanted to say this: Kostya is my son. Mine. I’ll decide how to raise him. And I won’t let you interfere. Lydia flushed crimson. — The way you speak to me— — Please leave. — What?! Mary grabbed the coat from the rack and shoved it into Lydia’s arms. — Leave my house. — You’re throwing me out? Me? Mary flung open the door. Took her mother-in-law by the elbow and marched her outside. Lydia resisted, but Mary was determined. Out went Lydia, out the door. — I’ll have my way! — Lydia shrieked, angry as ever. — I will not let you ruin my only grandson! — Goodbye, Lydia. — Sergey will hear about this! I’ll tell him everything! Mary slammed the door, pressed her back to it, and exhaled every last ounce of tension. Muffled shouting faded; footsteps echoed down the stairs. Silence descended. Her mother-in-law had finally crossed the line — endless criticism, advice, lectures on how to parent, what to feed, how to dress. And Sergey never saw the problem: “She means well,” “She’s experienced,” “What’s the harm in listening?” He idolised his mother. Every word sacred. Mary endured, day after day, visit after visit. Not today. Sergey returned from work just before eight. The click of the lock, the keys thrown absently on the table — yes, clearly Lydia had already called him. He trudged into the kitchen, never glancing at Kostya who was watching cartoons. — Kostya, sweetheart, stay here — Mary knelt, slid headphones over her son’s ears, queued up his favourite robot show. Kostya nodded, buried in the screen. Mary closed the nursery door and headed for the kitchen. Sergey stood at the window, arms crossed, not turning as she entered. — You threw my mother out. No question. A statement. — I asked her to leave. — You shoved her out the door! She cried on the phone for two hours! Two hours, Mary! Mary sat at the table, exhausted. — Doesn’t it bother you that she insulted me? Sergey hesitated, then waved it away. — She’s just worried for her grandson. What’s so wrong with that? — She called our son a weakling and a coward, Sergey. Our six-year-old. — Well, she got carried away, it happens. But Mum’s right in some ways, Mary. Boys need sports. Team spirit, resilience— Mary met his eyes. Stared until he looked away. — I was forced to do gymnastics when I was a kid. My mum decided — that was it. Five years, Sergey. Five years crying before every practice. Stretched to the point of pain, lost weight, begged to quit. Sergey was silent. — I still can’t stand gyms. And I won’t do that to my son. If Kostya ever wants football — fine. But only if he chooses. Never by force. — Mum just wants what’s best for him— — Then let her have another child and parent how she wants. But she won’t interfere with Kostya anymore. Nor will you, if you’re on her side. Sergey half moved to respond, but Mary left the kitchen. The rest of the evening passed in silence. Mary put Kostya to bed, then sat in the dark of the nursery listening to her son’s gentle breathing. Two tense, silent days followed. At dinner, Sergey cracked a joke, Mary smiled; the ice started to thaw. By Friday they were speaking — though Lydia was never mentioned. Saturday morning, Mary woke to the sound of the lock turning in the front door. She shot up, heart pounding. Robbers? In broad daylight? Phone in hand, she tiptoed into the hall. Lydia stood on the doorstep, triumphant, keys in hand. — Good morning, Mary dear. Mary, in baggy pyjamas and a stretched-out t-shirt, stood barefoot as Lydia looked down her nose, as if entitled to break in at 8am on a Saturday. — Where did you get those keys? Lydia jingled them under her nose. — Sergey gave them to me. He dropped by two days ago. Said — “Mum, forgive her, she didn’t mean to upset you.” Practically begging my forgiveness for your little tantrum. Mary blinked. Once. Twice. — Why are you here? — I’ve come for my grandson — get Kostya ready. Grandma’s signed him up for football, first training today! Fury slammed into her — hot, suffocating, blinding. Mary turned and bolted for the bedroom. Sergey lay with his back to the wall, shoulders tense. — Get up! — Mary, let’s talk later— She yanked off the duvet, grabbed his arm, dragged him to the living room. Lydia was already perched on the sofa, leafing through a magazine. — You gave her the keys — to my flat. Sergey squirmed. — It’s my flat, Sergey. Mine. I bought it, before we were married, with my own money. What made you think you could give your mother my keys? — Oh, how petty! — Lydia tossed the magazine aside. — Yours, mine… all you think about is yourself! Sergey did it for his son, that’s what matters. Since you won’t let me in, I need a way to see my grandson. — Shut your mouth! Lydia gasped, but Mary’s gaze was for Sergey only. — Kostya isn’t going to football, not unless he wants to. — That’s not your decision! — Lydia leapt up. — You’re nothing! Just a temporary blip in my son’s life! Think you’re special? Think you’re irreplaceable? Sergey only puts up with you for the child! Silence. Mary turned to her husband. Head down, no words. — Sergey? Nothing. Not a word in defence. Nothing. — Fine, — Mary nodded. Cold, clear calm settled over her. — Temporary, is it? Well, your time is up. Take your son, Lydia. He’s no longer my husband. — You wouldn’t dare! — Lydia went pale. — You’ve no right to abandon him! — Sergey, — Mary spoke quietly, looking directly at him. — You have half an hour. Pack your things and go. Or I’ll throw you out in your pyjamas — I don’t care. — Mary, wait, let’s talk— — We’re done talking. She turned to Lydia, smiled crookedly. — Keep the keys. I’m changing the locks today. …Divorce took four months. Sergey tried to come back, called, texted, arrived with flowers. Lydia threatened court, guardianship, connections. Mary hired a good lawyer and stopped picking up the phone. Two years slipped by… …The arts school hall buzzed with voices. Mary sat in the third row, clutching her program: “Konstantin Warren, Age 8. Beethoven, Ode to Joy.” Kostya walked onstage — serious, focused, white shirt, black trousers. Sat down at the grand piano, placed his hands on the keys. The first notes filled the hall, and Mary stopped breathing. Her boy was playing Beethoven. Her eight-year-old who asked for lessons, who spent hours at the piano, who chose this piece for his recital. When the last chord faded, the applause exploded. Kostya stood, bowed, found his mother’s face in the crowd and grinned — wide, proud, happy. Mary clapped with everyone, tears streaming down her cheeks. She’d done the right thing. She’d put her son above all — above opinions, above marriage, above the fear of being alone. Which is exactly what a mother should do…

Raising a Softy

“Why on earth have you signed him up for music lessons?”

Margaret Harris breezed past her daughter-in-law, tugging off her gloves with firm, brisk movements.

“Hello, Margaret. Do come in. And yes, I’m ever so pleased to see you too.”

Her sarcasm fell into a bottomless pit; Margaret simply tossed her gloves onto the hallway table and turned fully to face Emily.

“Tom rang me about it. Grinning from ear to ear, he wassaid, ‘Im starting piano lessons!’ Whats this all about then? Are you turning him into a little girl?”

Emily pressed the front door closed, slow and gentle, willing herself not to snap and scream right in Margarets face.

“It means your grandson will be studying music. Hes really keen on it.”

“Keen!” Margaret snorted, as if Emily had demanded Tom be taught underwater basket weaving. “Hes six! He hasnt the faintest idea what he wants. Thats your jobto guide him. Hes a boy, my grandson, an heirand youre raising him to be what, exactly?”

Margaret strode to the kitchen, flicking the kettle switch like she owned the place. Emily bit down so hard her jaw ached, and followed.

“Im raising him to be happy.”

“Youre raising a soft, wet rag, love! You shouldve put him in football. Rugby. Boys sports! He ought to grow up a proper young man, not not a pianist!”

Emily leaned against the doorway, counted to five, kept going. No use.

“Tom asked me himself. He really likes music.”

“Likes music, does he?” Margaret dismissed her with a wave. “James, at his age, was tearing around outside, off with the lads, playing cricket! And yours will be tinkling away on scales? Its embarrassing!”

Something inside Emily snapped. She pushed off and stepped closer.

“Are you quite finished?”

“No, Im not! Ive been meaning for ages to”

“And Ive meant to tell you, Margaret,” Emily dropped her voice to a fierce whisper. “Tom is my son. Mine. Ill decide how hes brought up. And you wont interfere.”

Margaret flushed crimson.

“Youhow dare you speak to me like that?!”

“Please leave.”

“What?!”

Emily brushed past, grabbed Margarets coat, and pressed it firmly into her arms.

“Out of my house, Margaret.”

“Youre throwing me out? Me?!”

Emily swung the door wide, took Margaret gently but firmly by the elbow, and ushered her towards the stairwell. Margaret pulled back, tried to wrench free, but Emily would not let go. Finally, she managed to push her mother-in-law out.

“Ill have my way!” Margaret shrieked from the landing, face twisted with fury. “You hear me? I wont let you ruin my only grandson!”

“Goodbye, Margaret.”

“James will hear all about this! Ill tell him everything!”

Emily closed the door. She collapsed against it, breathing out every last thread of tension.

For long minutes, angry mutterings filtered through the door, followed by loud footsteps down the stairs. Then, silence.

Shed had more than enough. Years of constant criticisms, unwanted advice, lectureshow to raise Tom, what to feed him, what clothes to buy. James never saw the problem. “Mum means well,” he always said. “Shes experienced. Just listen, whats the harm.” He worshipped his mother. Every word she spoke was gospel. Emily had to endure, day in, day out, each excruciating visit.

But not today.

James returned from work just shy of eight. Emily instantly knew Margaret had rung him, from the way he threw his keys onto the hall table and slumped into the kitchen, not even glancing into the lounge where Tom was watching cartoons.

“Tom, sweetheart, stay here,” Emily crouched before Tom, plopped gigantic headphones onto his ears, and switched on his favourite show about robot knights. “Mum and Dad need to talk.”

Tom nodded, glued to the screen. Emily closed his door and walked to the kitchen.

James was at the window, arms folded. He did not turn around when she entered.

“You forced my mum out.”

Not a question. A plain statement.

“I asked her to leave.”

“You shoved her out!” James wheeled around, jaw twitching. “She cried down the phone for two hours, Emily. Two hours!”

Emily sank into a chair. Her legs ached after a full day at work, and now this fresh nightmare.

“And youre fine with how she upset me?”

James faltered, just for a second, then waved it away.

“Shes worried for her grandson. Whats wrong with that?”

“She called our son soft, a wet blanket. Our son, James. Hes six.”

“She got heated, sure. But my mums right, Em. Boys need sport. Team spirit. Toughening up…”

Emily looked at him, long and hard, until James glanced away.

“When I was little, my mother forced gymnastics on me. Absolutely insisted. I spent five yearsfive yearssobbing before every session. Stretched until I cried, missed meals, begged her to let me stop.”

James stared.

“I still cant stand gyms. Even now. And Ill never put my son through that. If he wants football, fine. But only if he chooses. Never by force.”

“Mum only means well…”

“Then she should have another child and do as she wishes,” Emily rose from the table. “Margaret will not meddle in Toms upbringing anymore. And neither will you, if youre just her echo.”

James twitched, as if to protest, but Emily had already left. The rest of the evening passed in silence. Emily tucked Tom in, then sat in darkness, listening to his gentle breathing.

The next two days passed like a cold standoff. Then, one night at dinner, James made a joke; Emily smiledsomething shifted. By Friday, they were talking again, carefully skirting anything to do with Margaret.

Early Saturday morning, Emily woke with a start. Eight AM. Far too early for a weekend. James lay beside her, snoring softly, Tom surely asleep.

What had woken her?

She listenedtiny metallic chime from the hall. Someone turning the lock.

Her heart rocketed into her throat. Burglars? In broad daylight? She grabbed her phone from the bedside table and crept on tiptoe into the hallway.

The front door swung open.

Margaret stood on the threshold, a bunch of keys dangling from her fingers, triumphant smile bright as the morning.

“Good morning, darling.”

Emily stood barefoot on the cold tiles, oversized t-shirt and pyjama bottoms hanging off her, Margaret looming before her, perfectly comfortable waltzing into someone elses house at eight on a Saturday.

“Where did you get these keys?”

Margaret waggled them under Emilys nose.

“James gave them to me. Brought them over Thursday. Said, ‘Sorry Mum, she didnt mean to upset you.’ Settling your debts, he was, apologising for your little nonsense.”

Emily blinkedonce, twicetrying to process this jumble.

“What are you doing here? At this hour?”

“Here for my grandson,” Margaret hung up her coat, already marching toward Toms room. “Come along, Tommy! Grannys signed you up for football, first practice today!”

Rage stormed through Emilys veinshot and thick, suffocating and blinding. She spun and stormed into the bedroom.

James lay facing the wall, feigning sleep, shoulders tense beneath the covers.

“Get up!”

“Cant this wait, Em…”

She ripped off his blanket, grabbed his arm, and dragged him to the living room. James stumbled, tried to resist, but Emily refused to let go.

Margaret was already ensconced on the sofa, one leg crossed over the other, flipping through a magazine from the coffee table.

“You gave her keys,” Emily stopped dead in the centre, still gripping his wrist. “To my flat.”

James was silent, shuffling his feet, small as a scolded child.

“This is my flat, James. I bought it before we married. With my own money. How dare you give your mum a set of my keys?”

“Oh, how petty!” Margaret slammed the magazine shut. “Yours, not yours… All you ever think about is yourself! James cared about his son, thats why. He wanted me to see my grandson. Since you bar the door to me, he did the right thing.”

“Be quiet, please!”

Margaret gasped, scandalised, but Emily only stared at James.

“Tom wont be going to football. Unless he chooses.”

“Not up to you!” Margaret was on her feet, eyes wild. “Youre nobody! You wont always be here, you know! Think youre something special, do you? James sticks it out only for the boy.”

Silence.

Emily slowly turned to her husband. He stared at the carpet.

“James?”

Nothing. Not a word for her. Not a single defence.

“Fine,” Emily nodded, a strange, icy calm settling in. “A temporary fling. And it ends now. Take your son, Margaret. Hes no longer my husband.”

“You wouldnt dare!” Margaret, pale as bone, hissed. “You cant just leave him like this!”

“James,” Emily uttered, voice razor-sharp, “You have thirty minutes. Pack your things and go. Orout in your pyjamas. Up to you.”

“Emily, waitlets talk…”

“We’ve already talked.”

She turned to Margaret, baring her teeth in a crooked smile.

“Keep the keys if you want. Ill change the locks this afternoon.”

…The divorce lasted four months. James tried to come backcalls, messages, flowers at the door. Margaret threatened courts, custody fights, and called on secret connections. Emily hired an excellent solicitor and stopped answering.

Two years flew by…

…The hall at the local arts academy buzzed with voices. Emily sat in the third row, fidgeting with her programme”Thomas Harris, age 8. Beethoven: Ode to Joy”.

Tom strode out, grave and focused, in crisp white shirt and black trousers. He settled at the grand piano, hands poised.

The music filled the hall. Emily let herself goheld her breath as Tom played.

Her son, playing Beethoven. Her eight-year-old, whod begged for music lessons, spent hours at the piano, chosen the piece himself for this concert.

When the last chord faded, the hall erupted in applause. Tom stood, bowed, found his mums eyes, and beamedwide and joyful.

Emily clapped along, tears streaming down.

Shed done itshed put her son first, before opinions, before the marriage, before fear of being alone.

Thats what being a mother should mean.

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Raising a Softy, Are You? — Why Did You Sign Him Up for Piano Lessons? Lydia Peterson breezed past her daughter-in-law, peeling off her gloves. — Hello, Lydia. Please come in. Always a pleasure to see you. Her sarcasm landed poorly. Lydia tossed her gloves on the side table and turned to Mary. — Kostya called me. He’s positively beaming — “I’m going to learn piano!” What is this nonsense? Is he a girl now? Mary closed the door gently, carefully, fighting the urge to scream. — It means your grandson will be learning music because he loves it. — Loves it, does he? — Lydia snorted as if Mary was completely out of her mind. — He’s six, he hasn’t a clue what he likes! It’s your job to guide him. He’s a boy, an heir, my grandson — and just who are you raising him to be? The mother-in-law strode into the kitchen, flicked the kettle on with the authority of a queen. Mary followed, jaw clenched so tight it hurt. — I’m raising a happy child. — You’re raising a weakling — a wet blanket! — Lydia squared herself. — Football, wrestling — that’s what he needs! Make him a man, not some… pianist! Mary leaned against the doorframe and counted to five. It didn’t help. — Kostya asked himself. He loves music. — Loves it, ha! — Lydia waved her hand. — Sergey was playing hockey at his age! And your boy? He’ll be playing scales? Shameful! Something snapped inside Mary. She stepped forward. — Are you finished? — Not by a long shot! I’ve wanted to say— — Well, I’ve wanted to say this: Kostya is my son. Mine. I’ll decide how to raise him. And I won’t let you interfere. Lydia flushed crimson. — The way you speak to me— — Please leave. — What?! Mary grabbed the coat from the rack and shoved it into Lydia’s arms. — Leave my house. — You’re throwing me out? Me? Mary flung open the door. Took her mother-in-law by the elbow and marched her outside. Lydia resisted, but Mary was determined. Out went Lydia, out the door. — I’ll have my way! — Lydia shrieked, angry as ever. — I will not let you ruin my only grandson! — Goodbye, Lydia. — Sergey will hear about this! I’ll tell him everything! Mary slammed the door, pressed her back to it, and exhaled every last ounce of tension. Muffled shouting faded; footsteps echoed down the stairs. Silence descended. Her mother-in-law had finally crossed the line — endless criticism, advice, lectures on how to parent, what to feed, how to dress. And Sergey never saw the problem: “She means well,” “She’s experienced,” “What’s the harm in listening?” He idolised his mother. Every word sacred. Mary endured, day after day, visit after visit. Not today. Sergey returned from work just before eight. The click of the lock, the keys thrown absently on the table — yes, clearly Lydia had already called him. He trudged into the kitchen, never glancing at Kostya who was watching cartoons. — Kostya, sweetheart, stay here — Mary knelt, slid headphones over her son’s ears, queued up his favourite robot show. Kostya nodded, buried in the screen. Mary closed the nursery door and headed for the kitchen. Sergey stood at the window, arms crossed, not turning as she entered. — You threw my mother out. No question. A statement. — I asked her to leave. — You shoved her out the door! She cried on the phone for two hours! Two hours, Mary! Mary sat at the table, exhausted. — Doesn’t it bother you that she insulted me? Sergey hesitated, then waved it away. — She’s just worried for her grandson. What’s so wrong with that? — She called our son a weakling and a coward, Sergey. Our six-year-old. — Well, she got carried away, it happens. But Mum’s right in some ways, Mary. Boys need sports. Team spirit, resilience— Mary met his eyes. Stared until he looked away. — I was forced to do gymnastics when I was a kid. My mum decided — that was it. Five years, Sergey. Five years crying before every practice. Stretched to the point of pain, lost weight, begged to quit. Sergey was silent. — I still can’t stand gyms. And I won’t do that to my son. If Kostya ever wants football — fine. But only if he chooses. Never by force. — Mum just wants what’s best for him— — Then let her have another child and parent how she wants. But she won’t interfere with Kostya anymore. Nor will you, if you’re on her side. Sergey half moved to respond, but Mary left the kitchen. The rest of the evening passed in silence. Mary put Kostya to bed, then sat in the dark of the nursery listening to her son’s gentle breathing. Two tense, silent days followed. At dinner, Sergey cracked a joke, Mary smiled; the ice started to thaw. By Friday they were speaking — though Lydia was never mentioned. Saturday morning, Mary woke to the sound of the lock turning in the front door. She shot up, heart pounding. Robbers? In broad daylight? Phone in hand, she tiptoed into the hall. Lydia stood on the doorstep, triumphant, keys in hand. — Good morning, Mary dear. Mary, in baggy pyjamas and a stretched-out t-shirt, stood barefoot as Lydia looked down her nose, as if entitled to break in at 8am on a Saturday. — Where did you get those keys? Lydia jingled them under her nose. — Sergey gave them to me. He dropped by two days ago. Said — “Mum, forgive her, she didn’t mean to upset you.” Practically begging my forgiveness for your little tantrum. Mary blinked. Once. Twice. — Why are you here? — I’ve come for my grandson — get Kostya ready. Grandma’s signed him up for football, first training today! Fury slammed into her — hot, suffocating, blinding. Mary turned and bolted for the bedroom. Sergey lay with his back to the wall, shoulders tense. — Get up! — Mary, let’s talk later— She yanked off the duvet, grabbed his arm, dragged him to the living room. Lydia was already perched on the sofa, leafing through a magazine. — You gave her the keys — to my flat. Sergey squirmed. — It’s my flat, Sergey. Mine. I bought it, before we were married, with my own money. What made you think you could give your mother my keys? — Oh, how petty! — Lydia tossed the magazine aside. — Yours, mine… all you think about is yourself! Sergey did it for his son, that’s what matters. Since you won’t let me in, I need a way to see my grandson. — Shut your mouth! Lydia gasped, but Mary’s gaze was for Sergey only. — Kostya isn’t going to football, not unless he wants to. — That’s not your decision! — Lydia leapt up. — You’re nothing! Just a temporary blip in my son’s life! Think you’re special? Think you’re irreplaceable? Sergey only puts up with you for the child! Silence. Mary turned to her husband. Head down, no words. — Sergey? Nothing. Not a word in defence. Nothing. — Fine, — Mary nodded. Cold, clear calm settled over her. — Temporary, is it? Well, your time is up. Take your son, Lydia. He’s no longer my husband. — You wouldn’t dare! — Lydia went pale. — You’ve no right to abandon him! — Sergey, — Mary spoke quietly, looking directly at him. — You have half an hour. Pack your things and go. Or I’ll throw you out in your pyjamas — I don’t care. — Mary, wait, let’s talk— — We’re done talking. She turned to Lydia, smiled crookedly. — Keep the keys. I’m changing the locks today. …Divorce took four months. Sergey tried to come back, called, texted, arrived with flowers. Lydia threatened court, guardianship, connections. Mary hired a good lawyer and stopped picking up the phone. Two years slipped by… …The arts school hall buzzed with voices. Mary sat in the third row, clutching her program: “Konstantin Warren, Age 8. Beethoven, Ode to Joy.” Kostya walked onstage — serious, focused, white shirt, black trousers. Sat down at the grand piano, placed his hands on the keys. The first notes filled the hall, and Mary stopped breathing. Her boy was playing Beethoven. Her eight-year-old who asked for lessons, who spent hours at the piano, who chose this piece for his recital. When the last chord faded, the applause exploded. Kostya stood, bowed, found his mother’s face in the crowd and grinned — wide, proud, happy. Mary clapped with everyone, tears streaming down her cheeks. She’d done the right thing. She’d put her son above all — above opinions, above marriage, above the fear of being alone. Which is exactly what a mother should do…