She Charged Her Mother-In-Law Rent In A House She Never Paid For-Teptep

The paper made a soft scraping sound when Sloan pushed it across my kitchen table.

It was such a small sound for something so ugly.

Morning light came through the back windows in pale strips, touching the polished wood my husband Warren had sanded by hand in our garage twenty-six years earlier.

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My coffee had gone cold beside me, and the whole kitchen smelled faintly of burnt espresso from the pod machine Sloan had brought in without asking.

That machine sat where Warren’s old drip coffee maker used to sit, blinking red like it was impatient with all of us.

Sloan did not look impatient.

She looked prepared.

That was the first thing I noticed, before I looked at the paper, before I looked at my son, before I understood that the two people sitting at my own table had rehearsed this without me.

My son Gavin sat beside her with his phone faceup in his palm.

His thumb moved once across the screen.

Then he went still.

Sloan tapped the page with one neatly polished finger.

“Elaine,” she said, using the soft office voice she brought out whenever she wanted cruelty to sound like organization, “we ran the numbers.”

I looked down.

The title was printed in bold black letters.

Household Contribution Agreement.

Under that, in smaller type, was my full name.

Then there was a line for the monthly amount.

$800.

Sloan had highlighted the due date in yellow.

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