We were gathered around my in-laws’ dining table in Naperville, Illinois, eating roast beef and pretending the atmosphere wasn’t strained. My husband Evan sat beside me, quiet, his jaw tense the way it always became when he was near his older brother Mark. Across from me sat Mark’s wife, Sienna, dressed in a cream sweater that looked far too elegant for a simple family dinner.
Her nails were flawless, her smile perfectly polite—and sharp.
Sienna had disliked me since the day Evan first introduced us. Not openly, of course. That would have made her look cruel.
Instead, she used the subtler tactics experienced bullies prefer—small remarks, private jokes, and little embarrassments disguised as concern.
When Evan and I bought our first house, she asked sweetly, “Are you sure you can afford that neighborhood?”
When I received a promotion at work, she sighed and said, “You must be exhausted working so much,” as if ambition were something embarrassing.
And whenever I questioned something she said, she would smile and remark, “You’re so… intense.”
That evening she had been quieter than usual, which in hindsight should have warned me.
Halfway through dinner, she suddenly froze with her fork in the air and began patting around her chair like something important had disappeared.
Mark sighed dramatically. “Sienna, please don’t start.”
“I’m serious,” she snapped. She stood up, scanning the table before her eyes landed directly on me.
“It was right here.”
My mother-in-law set down her glass carefully. “Maybe it slipped—”
“It didn’t slip,” Sienna interrupted. Then she looked straight at me.
“You took it.”
The accusation hit the room like a plate shattering.
I blinked.
“What?”
Sienna walked around the table, raising her voice so everyone could hear. “Don’t act innocent. You’re always watching people’s belongings.
Like you’re worried you don’t have enough.”
My face flushed—not from guilt, but from the absurdity of being accused in front of everyone. Evan immediately turned toward her.
“Sienna, stop.”
But Mark didn’t stop her. In fact, he looked almost entertained.
“I didn’t take your wallet,” I said evenly.
Sienna tilted her head with a smug smile.
“Then you won’t mind if I check.”
She pointed toward the tote bag beside my chair—the one I always carried with my laptop and snacks for our nephew. Earlier I had opened it to grab my phone charger, so it was still slightly unzipped.
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