The Columbus Dispatch

Please, apologize to friends for grifting brother-in-law

- Carolyn Hax Write to Carolyn — whose column appears on Sundays, Wednesdays and Fridays — at tellme@ washpost.com.

Dear Carolyn: My very generous and wealthy (this is relevant) friends offered to throw a dinner for me and my husband for our 10th wedding anniversar­y. They asked for the guest list and we gave it to them, including my brother-in-law.

He is the sweetest guy in the world, would do anything for you, but he does have this flaw that he is always looking to game the system. He ended up ordering pre-dinner drinks that had to total in the hundreds (three shots of a very expensive scotch), he ordered two steaks for dinner and no sides, and he chose a bottle of wine that my friend who sat next to him later told me ran five figures.

Our friends didn’t balk at the check, but you could tell they were surprised at the final total since they discreetly asked the waiter to confirm the charges. I would like to address it with them and offer to pay toward my brother-in-law’s extravagan­ce. My husband says they had to expect that sort of thing since they picked such a fancy restaurant and didn’t set the menu, and we would be embarrassi­ng them. Who is right? —N

How can someone be the “sweetest guy in the world” who finds ways to get other people — unwittingl­y — to pay for his indulgence­s? That is exactly what it means to “game the system.” It’s about taking advantage of someone else. Period. There is nothing sweet about it.

When one “discreetly ask(s) the waiter to confirm the charges,” one is technicall­y not balking, you’re right, because that means stopping short or refusing to pay — but it’s a pretty darn good example of flinching. That’s the thing people do involuntar­ily when they realize they are about to be hit with something painful.

When you are directly or indirectly responsibl­e for causing someone pain, you apologize.

For your spouse to declare, more or less, that your friends had it coming because they chose to be extra generous has me clutching my pearls so hard I might rip them off and use them to thwack him and his brother both.

Call your friends and say you are horrified by your brother-inlaw’s behavior, of which you are only now fully aware, and offer to make them whole; either way, the next dinner or three will be on you. Also tell your brother-in-law you are upset that he took advantage of your friends’ generosity, and let your spouse know you are doing it; and, finally, when it’s up to you, don’t invite your brother-in-law for anything that involves a menu again.

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