My Key Wouldn’t Turn, and Through New Curtains I Saw My Mother-in-Law in My Kitchen—So I Made One Call
I knew something was wrong the second the key refused to turn. It was a cold Monday morning in late January, the kind that hangs in the air like a breath that never exhales. I had just returned from St.Joseph’s Hospital, still in the same jeans I’d been wearing for two days, still carrying the same overnight bag I’d packed when Ethan collapsed.
The bouquet in my left hand—roses and lilies from his co-workers—had wilted in the backseat overnight. My eyes were swollen, lips cracked from too much crying and too little sleep.
I had watched my husband die in the cardiac unit twelve hours earlier. I wasn’t ready to face the silence of our house, but I also wasn’t ready for what I saw instead.
I stepped onto the porch and slid my key into the front door.I checked the spare, the one hidden behind the loose porch stone. Still no luck.
It was like the lock had forgotten me. Or worse, rejected me.
That’s when I noticed the curtains.
The white linen ones I’d hemmed myself were gone, replaced by thick velvet panels in a garish floral print I’d never seen before. My stomach dropped. I peered closer through the narrow slit between fabric and wall, squinting against the morning glare.
Inside, the living room was cluttered with boxes.
Cardboard towers where there should have been clean space. A pink velvet pillow sat on my reading chair.
A floral teacup on the coffee table. And then I saw her.
Diana, my mother-in-law, wearing a navy cardigan and a smile that sent ice crawling down my spine.
She was sipping tea—my tea from the wedding china Ethan and I had saved three years to buy. Across from her, casually tossing throw blankets into a basket, was Joseline, Ethan’s younger sister. They were laughing, moving in like I didn’t exist, like Ethan hadn’t died the night before.
I knocked.
No answer. I knocked again, louder this time, fists trembling, throat raw.
After what felt like forever, the door cracked open. Diana’s figure filled the frame, composed and calm, her arms folded tightly across her chest like she’d been preparing for this moment for years.