Living with my son Andrew and his cold wife Kate wasn’t easy. I exaggerated a leg injury just to stay with them, but Kate made
her resentment obvious. One day, after an argument about yard work, their usually grumpy neighbor, Mr. Davis—Peter—
surprised me by inviting me to dinner. It was unexpected kindness that brightened my dull days.
Our dinner started stiff, but a shared love for jazz sparked something between us. He hummed, I danced, and for the first time
in years, I felt joy. We began spending more time together, and even Kate seemed encouraging—until Thanksgiving, when I
overheard her thanking Peter for pretending to like me in exchange for a record player. My heart sank.
When I confronted them, I learned Andrew and Kate had planned the whole thing, hoping Peter and I would help each other
out. I was hurt—until Peter admitted the setup didn’t matter anymore. He’d fallen for me for real. “You made me feel alive
again,” he said. His honesty softened my anger.
That moment changed everything. I forgave him, and we decided to keep the record player—not for Kate, but for us. Each
Thanksgiving since, we play jazz, dance in the living room, and cherish the love that began with a lie but turned into something real.