I’ve always known my husband was a mama’s boy—the kind who straightens up the second her name appears on his phone. Honestly, the only reason our marriage lasted this long was distance. His mother, Lorraine, lived two hours away, and that space kept the peace. When she visited, it was brief and tolerable. She’d walk in, scan the house for flaws, and deliver her usual sharp remarks before leaving us to recover in silence.
“This place feels drafty.” “You still haven’t fixed that cabinet?” “You’ve been supporting Goodwill, I see.” Her visits weren’t conversations—they were inspections. I once watched her swipe a finger along the windowsill and hold it up like evidence. Jake would laugh nervously, barely defending me. And when she left, the house felt like ours again.
Then came the call that changed everything. Lorraine announced she’d be staying in our town for a full week. My stomach dropped. A week of her constant criticism felt unbearable. Jake tried suggesting a hotel, but she shut it down instantly. Then she said the part that made my chest tighten—she didn’t feel comfortable around me.
Jake looked at me, unsure. Lorraine’s voice sharpened as she reminded him she had gifted us the house. “She must go,” she said. “I won’t share space with her.” I waited for him to defend me. Instead, he hesitated—long enough for me to realize something was about to change, and not in my favor.