I Cut Off My Ex-Mother-In-Law’s Card—Then She Came To My Door-Teptep

I cancelled my ex-mother-in-law’s credit card the moment the divorce was finalised.

When my ex-husband rang me, furious, I finally said everything I had kept locked behind my teeth for years.

“She’s your mother, not mine. If she still wants quilted Chanel bags from Fifth Avenue, figure out how to pay for them yourself.”

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Less than twelve hours later, violent pounding shook my front door.

The call came before my tea had even brewed.

Anthony’s name flashed on my phone while I was standing in the kitchen of my flat, watching steam curl from the kettle and trying to understand why the quiet felt so unfamiliar.

The divorce had been finalised the day before.

Not almost done.

Not pending.

Not waiting for one more signature, one more discussion, one more request from his solicitor passed through mine like a note in a school corridor.

Done.

A stamped document lay on the counter beside my bank card and a small pile of post I had not yet opened.

For five years, I had imagined that final document would make me feel triumphant.

Instead, I felt tired in a way that went down to the bone.

Then Anthony’s voice came through the speaker, and the old life pushed straight back into my kitchen.

“What on earth have you done, Marissa?”

No hello.

No apology.

No acknowledgement that, legally and morally, he no longer had the right to demand anything from me before breakfast.

Just outrage.

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