He ordered me to dry my tears, cook all this food, and serve his friends with a smile, as if nothing had happened. The dirt on my mother’s grave is still fresh, sir. The chrysanthemums on her grave haven’t even begun to wilt. But here, in this house, the music is blasting, and I am forbidden to be sad. My tears started to flow again, but this time I let them run while holding my head high. I had verbalized the truth that had been suppressed by my husband’s pride. Mark looked as if he had been struck by lightning. He opened his mouth to deny it, but no sound came out.

He realized he was finished. All eyes were now on him, filled with disgust and disbelief. The same colleagues who had praised him earlier now looked at him like a monster. How could a man be so cruel to his wife? How could he celebrate a party right after burying his mother-in-law? The reputation Mark had built over the years crumbled in an instant. Mr. Harrison listened to my entire story without blinking. His face slowly changed from an impassive and authoritative expression. It now emanated extreme anger. His jaw tensed so much that the veins in his neck stood out. His right hand clenched into a tight fist at his side.

His face turned red with contained fury. He looked at Mark with a murderous glare. The calm leadership aura from before had vanished, replaced by the terrifying aura of a man witnessing an injustice before his very eyes. Mr. Harrison approached Mark. Now the distance between them was minimal. Mark backed away step by step until his back hit the wall. He was cornered with no escape. Mr. Harrison pointed at Mark’s face just inches from his nose. His voice was no longer low, but boomed through the room, making the window panes tremble. Mr. Evans, is what your wife says true? You held a promotion party on your mother-in-law’s grave on the same day your wife lost her mother.