Jordan didn’t hesitate.
“We make decisions together,” he said calmly. “If Jen doesn’t believe my condition was enough, then I trust her judgment completely. She can decide what happens next.”
All eyes turned toward me.
Something had shifted in the room.
My parents felt it too. Maybe for the first time in twelve years, they realized they were no longer controlling the conversation.
“Fine,” I said slowly, turning the check over in my hands. “If you want our help, you’ll have to earn it.”
Dad laughed bitterly. “Earn it? We’re your parents.”
“And you spent years mocking the man I love because he’s different from you,” I replied. “So here’s my condition: spend one week at Jordan’s company.”
Mom frowned. “Doing what?”
“Showing up,” I answered. “Every day. Sitting there. Listening. Paying attention.”
Dad’s expression darkened. “We don’t need jobs.”
“It’s not a job,” I said. “You won’t work. You won’t get paid. You’ll simply experience what it feels like to be the only ‘different’ people in a room.”
Mom looked confused. “I don’t understand.”
Jordan cleared his throat. “My company prioritizes inclusivity. Everyone on staff is either someone with dwarfism like me, someone living with physical or cognitive disabilities, or—”
“You cannot be serious,” Dad snapped, glaring at me.
“You spend a week there,” I continued. “You see what my husband built. You see the people who helped him build it. And you do it without making a single joke.”
Mom looked horrified. “This is ridiculous, Jennifer. We came here for help, and you’re trying to punish us.”
“No,” I said quietly. “This is the first honest conversation we’ve had in years. If it feels like punishment to you… that says more about you than it does about me.”
That was when Dad finally lost his temper.
“We are not wasting a week at some circus just to get help from you. This is insane.”
The word hung in the air.
Circus.
Not disguised as humor this time. Not softened with laughter.
Just the ugly truth they’d always believed.
For the first time in twelve years, I refused to look away from it.
I stood and pointed toward the door.
“You both need to leave. Now.”
“Please,” Mom pleaded softly. “Your father didn’t mean it that way.”
“Yes,” I replied. “He did.”
“You’re being cruel, Jennifer,” Dad snapped. “You’re humiliating us.”
“There has to be another solution,” Mom said desperately, turning to Jordan. “Please…”
Jordan shook his head.
“I stand with my wife.”
Dad stood abruptly, anger twisting across his face. What he said next destroyed whatever relationship we had left.
“I guess I shouldn’t expect a half-sized man to wear the pants in this marriage. Hard to stand up to your wife when she’s twice your height, huh?”
“OUT!” I screamed.