Her Mother-In-Law Demanded Rent, Then Saw The Penthouse Truth-Tien3004

By 8:12 last Tuesday morning, the espresso in Brad’s cup had gone cold.

The light coming through the dining room windows looked thin and gray, the kind of Chicago morning that made every surface feel a little too honest.

My iPad was still open beside my coffee, the screen smudged from an hour of reviewing quarterly reports.

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Then Katherine Thompson walked in without knocking.

She had been my mother-in-law for exactly five days, but she had already mastered the art of entering my life like she owned the walls.

Her beige coat looked expensive in a way that did not feel elegant.

It felt like a warning.

Her handbag landed on the chair beside me with a soft thud, and her eyes moved over my navy suit, my laptop bag, the coffee I had not finished, and finally my face.

“Put away your ridiculous little office toy, Emma,” she said.

Brad did not correct her.

That was the first thing I noticed.

Not her tone.

Not the insult.

Brad’s silence.

Katherine slid a document across my dining table, and the paper made a sharp little slap against the wood.

I looked down.

At the top was my full married name.

Emma Thompson.

Under that, Tenant.

The monthly rent was $1,500.

The property owner was listed as Thompson Family Trust.

“This apartment belongs to the Thompson family,” Katherine said, as if she were reading a sentence from a law book instead of inventing humiliation over breakfast.

“You are living in our family’s apartment now. You will pay fifteen hundred dollars a month in rent. A woman from your background should consider that generous.”

For a moment, the room went very still.

The refrigerator hummed.

Brad’s spoon scraped against the inside of his espresso cup.

A car horn sounded somewhere far below the windows.

I looked at my husband.

“Brad, are you letting your mother charge your wife rent just to live with you?”

He finally raised his eyes, but not with surprise.

That was the second thing I noticed.

He looked tired of me before I had even begun to defend myself.

“Stop being hysterical, Emma,” he said.

The words landed flatter than Katherine’s paper.

“Mom is right. You work some little dead-end job and act like you built an empire. You hit the jackpot marrying into the Thompsons. We gave you a lifestyle you never could have afforded, so stop with the blue-collar pride and show some gratitude.”

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