On the night before my work trip, I found my mother-in-law digging through the things in my suitcase, thinking no one was looking. What she did next would have destroyed my marriage if I hadn’t caught her red-handed. It still haunts me that she’d go this far to ruin me.
You’d think after three and a half years with Dave, his mother would’ve finally accepted that I wasn’t going anywhere.
But from day one, Paula made it her personal mission to make my life miserable.
She doesn’t just dislike me. She absolutely despises everything about me, from the way I cook dinner for her son to the career that takes me out of town sometimes. She even gets irritated by the way I laugh at Dave’s jokes.
“Do you really need to travel so much for work?” she asked last month when I mentioned a conference in Denver.
“A good wife should be home with her husband.”
Dave squeezed my hand under the table. “Mom, Miley’s career is important. We support each other.”
Paula’s smile looked like it was carved from ice.
“Of course, dear. I’m just looking out for you.”
That’s my MIL’s specialty. She wraps her venom in fake concern and makes me look like the bad guy if I dare push back against her manipulation.
When Dave and I got married in June, I thought maybe things would change.
Maybe she’d finally see that her son chose me and respect that choice. I was wrong.
If anything, she got worse after our wedding, becoming increasingly intrusive and manipulative in her relentless campaign to prove I wasn’t good enough for her precious boy.
But last Friday night, she crossed a line I never saw coming.
“Traffic’s going to be terrible this late,” Paula announced after dinner, settling deeper into our couch like she was planning to take root.
Dave’s father had already headed home an hour ago, complaining about an early morning. But Paula kept finding reasons to stay longer.
“My head’s pounding something fierce,” she said, pressing her palm to her forehead with theatrical flair.
“I don’t trust myself to drive like this.”
I glanced at the clock. It was already past 10, and I had a 6 a.m. flight to catch for a client presentation in Phoenix.
My suitcase sat unpacked in the guest room, mocking me.
“Mom, you could always take a rideshare,” Dave suggested gently.
“At this hour? In this neighborhood?” Paula clutched her chest like he’d suggested she hitchhike with serial killers. “Besides, I’d hate to wake your father stumbling around in the dark.”
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