Mother-In-Law Claimed My New Flat—Then Security Exposed Her Lie-heuh

There is a kind of peace you only understand after you have been away from home too long.

It is not silence exactly.

It is the hum of the fridge, the soft click of the heating, the faint smell of your own washing powder in the hallway.

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It is knowing where your keys fall on the side table without looking.

It is the comfort of a mug being chipped in the place your thumb already expects.

For six weeks, I had missed that peace.

I had been staying with my younger sister after her surgery, sleeping on a narrow sofa bed and pretending I was not exhausted every time she apologised for needing help.

My days had become a blur of hospital follow-ups, pharmacy bags, toast cut into small pieces, fresh bedding, washing hung over radiators and the slow, humiliating business of pain management.

By the time I came back to Unit 12B, I was carrying more than two suitcases.

I was carrying tiredness deep enough to make my bones feel hollow.

All I wanted was my own shower, my own kettle, and one evening where no one needed anything from me.

The moment I opened the door, I knew something was wrong.

The flat did not smell like mine.

Someone had sprayed cheap lavender air freshener until it sat thick in the air, trying and failing to cover the smell of burnt toast.

The television was loud in the living room, some daytime programme spilling voices through the hallway.

A pair of slippers I had never seen before sat by the shoe rack.

My raincoat, which I normally kept on the first hook, had been pushed to the end like an unwanted guest.

For a second, I thought Daniel had let someone in to clean.

Then my mother-in-law appeared.

Lorraine Whitmore stood at the far end of the hallway wearing a peach satin robe.

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