Mother-In-Law Tried To Throw Me Out Of My Own Flat-heuh

My mother-in-law met me at the door of my own flat and pointed outside.

“Leave now,” she shouted. “My son bought this place for me. If you don’t get out, I’m calling the police.”

She said it before I had even pulled my second suitcase across the threshold.

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For a moment, I stood there with my hand still around the handle, listening to the broken wheel scrape once against the floor.

I had been awake for nearly a full day.

The flight back from Boston had been delayed, the airport had been packed, and by the time I reached my building, the rain had turned the pavement glossy and grey.

My coat collar was damp.

My back ached.

One suitcase had a cracked corner, and the other kept tipping sideways whenever I let go of it.

All I wanted was the ordinary mercy of my own home.

A hot shower.

A glass of water.

The kettle clicking on while I stood barefoot in my kitchen, doing nothing.

Instead, Fiona Vance was inside my living room wearing a satin dressing gown.

She looked comfortable.

That was the worst part.

She was not standing awkwardly as if she had been caught somewhere she should not be.

She was standing with one shoulder angled towards the doorway, coffee in hand, as though I had interrupted her morning.

The mug she held made my stomach tighten.

It was my grandmother’s favourite mug.

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