She hadn’t bothered to correct them. She pondered this for a second, and watched the lights on the side of the pool dance around in the tiny chops she’d created when she jumped in. No, she hadn’t bothered to correct them, because--at the time--she’d been enveloped in other things. Kate had far too many family members to keep track of what each one of them said at parties or holidays, and if she was being honest, she didn’t care to. If she hadn’t developed the skill to ignore them--most of the time, anyway--someone as sensitive as her would shrivel under the snide remarks and rude comments. Kate listened to the people who really mattered, and her nosy cousins gossiping in Spanish across the tables didn’t mean for anyone to hear them, she was sure. Since Charlie had been in a big fat sulk after dinner, she assumed this issue was the culprit for his dumpster-fire attitude.
“Charlie, I don’t know exactly what it was. You know how big my house is and how long that table is. Everyone is included, shitty or not. You have to know that when I’m busy, or paying attention to you, I don’t hear everything that everyone says.” Kate informed him, with a tone that still had a slight edge, but he had really gone about this the wrong way. Delivery was important to her. Almost as important as the message itself.
When or if we have kids.[/i] Something inside her twanged and stung. She was faced with another dilemma, now: focus on one issue at a time or bring that theme into their conversation and risk an even more colossal argument. Kate closed her brown eyes for clarity and reopened them after just a moment. “I. Okay, one thing at a time,” She was resolute. One thing at a time, indeed. If she overwhelmed herself with thoughts of the wrong future, she’d take a deep dive--metaphorically, this time--into a hole with no foreseeable end.
“You’re right. It’s none of their business. But you knew, when you married me,” Kate said a little softer, “That my family is full of a bunch of nosy… brats. They don’t know what they’re talking about. And you have to treat it that way. That’s what I’ve had to do my whole life, and you’re part of my family now. I’m happy to help you with whatever you need, but you also have to tell me--and not just get mad at me for something they did,” Kate’s voice escalated in volume, and she drifted around in the same area of the pool, choosing to stop there.