My Fiancé Gave His Mother My Key—Then They Claimed My Rooms-Teptep

My fiancé gave his mother my house key, and when I came home, his family were already behaving as if the place had been handed over to them.

The first sentence I heard was not a greeting.

It was an instruction.

Image

“What are you doing standing there? Go into the kitchen. The family is hungry.”

I had barely stepped across my own threshold.

My work bag was still on my shoulder, my coat was damp from the drizzle, and my feet were aching from a Friday that had stretched far longer than it should have.

All day I had been thinking about coming home.

Not to a party.

Not to a house full of strangers.

Just home.

The kettle, the sofa, the quiet tick of the clock in the sitting room, the ordinary relief of locking the door behind me and not speaking to anyone for ten minutes.

Instead, the door was already open.

Cars had been wedged along the kerb outside, one of them badly angled over the edge of the pavement.

The hallway smelt of wet coats, cooked food, and too many people breathing in rooms that had never been theirs.

A child ran past me with sticky fingers and a biscuit in his mouth.

Someone’s handbag sat on my console table.

A pile of unfamiliar keys, a folded receipt, and a contactless card had been dumped beside the ceramic bowl my father had chosen for that exact spot.

I remember noticing the receipt first.

It was such a small thing, just a bit of paper with a crease down the middle, but it looked obscene sitting there among my post.

As if the house had already stopped being mine in tiny, practical ways.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *