Tomorrow, or Perhaps Next Year?

No, Mum, youre not coming over anymoretoday, tomorrow, or even next year.A story where patience finally snapped.
I wrestled for ages with how to begin this narrative, and each time only two words surfaced: audacity and silent complicity. One belonged to my motherinlaw, the other to my husband. In the middle? Mea woman who tried to be kind, courteous, wellbehaveduntil I understood that staying silent any longer would turn our family home into a hollow shell.
I still cant fathom how someone can stroll into anothers house and help themselves, as if everything were theirs. Yet thats exactly what my motherinlaw did, all for her precious daughtermy husbands sister.
Every visit ended with something missing: the meat from the freezer, a whole pot of shepherds pie from the oven, and once even my brandnew hair straightener disappearedbefore Id even used it. Emilys hair gets so frizzy, and you barely leave the house anyway, theyd say.
I bit my tongue, clenched my teeth, explained it to Oliver. He would just shrug, Thats Mumshe means no harm. Well replace it.
The final straw arrived just before our fifth wedding anniversary. Wed arranged a special night out at a fancy restaurant, like the old days. Id already chosen the perfect dress and needed the right heels to match, so I splurged on an expensive pair Id been dreaming about since last summer. I left them boxed in the bedroom, waiting for the big night.
But life had other plans.
That day I got stuck at work and asked Oliver to pick up Lily from nursery. He agreedthen, as usual, something urgent came up, so he called his mum, handed her our keys, and let her fetch Lily and wait at our place until I returned.
When I got home, I headed straight to the bedroom. My stomach droppedthe shoebox was gone.
Oliver, where are my new shoes? I asked, already anticipating the answer.
How should I know? he shrugged.
Was your mum here?
Yes, she picked up Lily, hung around a bit, then left.
And the keys?
I gave them to her. What else was I supposed to do?
I grabbed my phone and called her. She answered on the first ring.
Good evening, I said, icy but polite. Im sure you know why Im calling.
No, actually I dont, she replied, without a hint of remorse.
Where. Are. My. Shoes?
I gave them to Emily. You have far too many pairs anyway, and she has nothing to wear for graduation.
Click. Silence. No apology, no shame. She hung up.
Oliver sighed, predictably. Well buy you another pair, love. Dont make a fuss. Shes my mum.
I took his arm and marched him to the mall, straight to the display of the exact designer heels Id been eyeing online for months. The price tag nearly gave him a heart attack.
Olivia, thats half my monthly salary! he gasped.
You said wed buy them, so we are, I replied smoothly.
And he bought themsigning his own receipt for years of silent enabling.
The saga wasnt over. On the drive home his phone buzzed with a text from Mum:
Popping round tonight. Got bags of greens taking up space in my freezerIll store them at yours and collect them in a month or two.
I watched his face as he read it, his jaw tightening. For the first time, he dialed her number and said, firm as steel:
Mum, you wont be coming over. Not today, not tomorrow, not next year. Your last favor cost us far too much.
He hung up. I looked at him, and for the first time in years I felt we truly were a teama home that keeps its door shut against thieves but opens wide for those who respect it.

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Tomorrow, or Perhaps Next Year?
It’s a Shame I Lived My Life the Wrong Way