I caught my mother-in-law digging in my suitcase the night before my work trip, and the reason left me shaking. Even now, thinking about it makes my stomach twist. What she tried to do that night could have destroyed my marriage if I hadn’t caught her red-handed.
For as long as I’d known her, my mother-in-law, Lorraine, had a way of making me feel like I was never enough for her son. From the beginning, she was vocal about not liking that I had a demanding career. I worked in marketing for an international firm, and part of my job required me to travel several times a year.
The trips weren’t glamorous vacations—they were stressful, tightly scheduled conferences and client meetings—but in her eyes, they made me selfish. “A wife should be home with her husband, not running around airports,” she would say, shaking her head as if my choices personally offended her. I tried for years to brush it off.
I told myself she came from a different generation, one where women were expected to put family above everything else. I thought if I just stayed patient, she’d eventually respect the balance I was trying to strike between career and marriage. But instead of softening, her disapproval hardened.
Each trip I took was another strike against me. My husband, Julian, did his best to shield me from her criticism. He’d defend me when she complained, reminding her that he supported my career and was proud of me.
But even he couldn’t undo the passive-aggressive remarks she made at family gatherings or the way she’d sigh whenever I mentioned an upcoming trip. Still, nothing could have prepared me for what I caught her doing that night. I had just finished packing for a three-day conference in Chicago.
My suitcase was zipped and ready by the door of our bedroom. Julian was downstairs making us tea, and I had stepped out briefly to grab some papers from my home office. When I returned, I stopped dead in the hallway.
The bedroom door was slightly ajar, and I heard rustling inside. At first, I assumed it was Julian, maybe adding something he thought I’d forgotten. But when I pushed the door open, the sight before me sent an icy jolt through my veins.
Lorraine was kneeling on the floor, her back to me, my suitcase unzipped and open in front of her. Her hands moved quickly, like she knew she had only seconds. She pulled something from her purse—a small folded envelope—and tucked it under a stack of my blouses.
Then she smoothed the clothes over it, zipped the suitcase halfway, and sat back with a satisfied look on her face. “Lorraine,” I said, my voice sharper than I intended. She startled, her eyes flashing wide before she schooled her expression into something calm.
“Oh, sweetheart,” she said sweetly, rising to her feet. “I was just making sure you didn’t forget anything. You young women are always so busy, you don’t think of the essentials.”
I walked past her and bent over the suitcase.
My fingers found the envelope instantly, the edges sticking out slightly where she’d hastily shoved it. Pulling it out, I opened the flap—and my breath caught in my throat. Inside were several printed photographs.
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