When Maxine catches her mother-in-law in the act of stealing, years of cruelty unravel. But exposing the truth is just the first step, because nothing burns brighter than a woman done playing nice…
The first time I met Lorraine, she looked me up and down, her gaze slow and deliberate, like she was cataloging flaws. Her lips curved into something that wasn’t quite a smile.
“Oh,” she said, her voice dripping with honeyed disdain.
“How… quaint you are.”
There was a pause between each syllable, was surgical, a scalpel disguised as politeness. I felt my cheeks heat, the ribbon-tied box of lemon shortbread was suddenly heavy in my hands.
I’d baked them the night before, humming softly in my kitchen, imagining this moment would be sweet…
maybe even welcoming.
Instead, her words sliced through my hope like a cold wind.
Lorraine turned to her son, my boyfriend then, and grimaced.
“Tyler, don’t you think someone a little more sophisticated would suit you better?”
I froze mid-smile, the box trembling slightly in my grip.
“Mom, that’s enough.” Tyler muttered under his breath, but she just hummed and disappeared into the kitchen.
That was the beginning.
In the three years since we got married, she never pretended to approve of me. Her disapproval was a constant hum beneath every interaction, like a low-frequency sound only I could hear.
“A preschool teacher? Seriously, Maxine,” she’d scoff at every family gathering.
“How sweet. Someone has to babysit the neighborhood kids, I suppose.”
She commented on my cooking too, saying everything was either “too safe” or “too eager” or had “way too much garlic, goodness me.”
Every word was a needle, pricking holes in my confidence until I felt like a patchwork of apologies. For the most part, I didn’t know how to behave around her — I was polite and kind, but even my patience was wearing thin.
I practiced smiles in the mirror before dinner, the kind that said I’m fine even when I wasn’t.
“You dress like a picture book, Max,” she told me one evening after a school concert.
Another time, Lorraine leaned toward me during dinner.
“I hope you’re ready to live a very simple life.
Tyler could’ve had so much more in his life,” she said.
She said it like she was mourning him. Like my presence had somehow cost her son the glittering future she had once imagined.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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