They Filled Her First Home With Relatives — Then She Found The Papers-heuh

My husband and I bought our first home after years of sacrifice, but my mother-in-law filled every room with relatives and told me, “Family rules this house,” until I found some documents that changed everything and realised they didn’t just want to stay temporarily.

Judith did not knock like a guest.

She came in like weather.

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Three bags first, then the suitcase, then the little statue wrapped in a tea towel, then her voice filling the narrow hallway before I had even found somewhere to put the coats.

“I’m only here to help you settle in,” she said, kissing Brandon on the cheek.

She did not ask where she should sleep.

She did not ask whether we were ready for visitors.

She walked through the living room, looked at the bare floorboards, glanced at the boxes stacked against the wall, and made a small sound as though the house had disappointed her personally.

I was too happy to argue.

That is the foolish thing about happiness when you have fought for it.

You think nobody would be cruel enough to step on something you have only just managed to build.

For seven years, Brandon and I had lived like people holding their breath.

I worked at the chemist, smiling through long shifts, sore feet, awkward customers, and the sharp smell of antiseptic that clung to my blouse even after I washed it.

Brandon worked at a warehouse and took double shifts whenever they were offered, coming home with tired eyes and hands rough from boxes, pallets, tape, and cold mornings.

We did not go away.

We did not replace the car when it started making that worrying noise in winter.

We did not buy things because we liked them.

We bought what we needed, and even then we checked the price twice.

There were birthdays with a supermarket cake between us and a candle saved from the year before.

There were Friday nights when other couples went to the pub and we sat at the tiny table in our rented flat, counting what we could put aside after rent, bills, food, and debt.

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