I’ve always been the kind of grandmother people didn’t expect. Not the quiet, knitting-on-the-porch type, but the one out roller-skating at the park, trying salsa classes at midnight, and signing up for puppy yoga just because it sounded fun.
Slowing down? Not in my vocabulary.
If someone had asked me at seventy-nine what I wanted for my eightieth year, I would’ve said, “A bigger to-do list.” I still had places to see, skills to learn, and more than a few adventures in mind.
And, of course, there was Jason — my grandson, my pride and joy, my reason for canceling anything and everything at a moment’s notice.
Kelly, my daughter-in-law, seemed happy enough to let me have him whenever she had “stuff” to do. Stuff that happened nearly every day.
“Clementina, can you watch Jason for a few hours?”
“Would you mind putting him to bed tonight?”
“Could you grab him early from school tomorrow?”
Every time, Jason would come running toward me, arms wide. “Grandma!” That word alone could keep me smiling for days.
Jack, my son, probably thought his wife was supermom. He’d come home from work to a clean house and a cheerful kid, never realizing that I was the reason for both.
When Jack started sending me extra money to thank me for all I did, Kelly’s smile got a little tighter. I caught her watching me sometimes, eyes narrowing like she was doing math in her head. Once, I even overheard her saying, “If he keeps sending her that much, I’ll never get the…” before she stopped short.
I should’ve known something was brewing.
So when I announced I was throwing a big picnic for my eightieth birthday, Kelly barely hid her disdain.
“A picnic? At your age? You should’ve booked a restaurant. Jack gives you so much money…”
I just smiled. “A restaurant couldn’t fit everyone I want there.”
On the day of the picnic, everything was perfect — balloons swaying in the summer breeze, the scent of grilled veggies and sunscreen, Jason running around like he owned the park. Then he handed me a huge box. Inside? A pink scooter with glittery streamers.
“So we can ride together!” he said proudly.
I couldn’t say no. We rode to the ice cream cart, but when I turned around with a cone in hand… Jason was gone.
I searched, heart pounding, calling his name, riding that scooter like I was twenty again. I burst back to the picnic breathless. “Jason’s missing!”
Kelly wasted no time. “See? I told you she can’t handle it anymore!”
But then… giggling. Jason popped out from under a picnic blanket. “We were playing hide-and-seek!”
My relief was quickly replaced by something else when Jason added innocently, “Mom told me to hide from you.”
Kelly’s eyes flashed. “That was our secret!”
And just like that, I saw the truth. She was setting me up to look incapable — all so she could justify replacing me.
That night, I found the Instagram post. Kelly and a young blonde woman, tagged as @nanny.nina. My next move was obvious.
The next morning, I met Nina for coffee. She was bright, sweet… and more than happy to accept a month’s pay to suddenly have “a family emergency” just before Jack and Kelly’s big trip.
When their flight day came and Nina canceled last minute, Kelly had no choice but to leave Jason with me. I didn’t rub it in. I just opened my arms and said, “We’re going to have the best summer ever.”
And we did. We baked pies, invented games, explored museums — Jason was glowing by the time his parents came back. Jack looked around my spotless house and said, almost to himself, “Wasn’t it always you? Cooking, cleaning, reading to him…”
I didn’t answer. Jason was already calling from the porch, two spoons in hand, a tub of rocky road between us.
Because the truth was simple — no one could out-grandma me.