The phone rang at exactly 8:14 on the morning of my thirty-sixth birthday.

I smiled when I saw the caller ID for exactly half a second.
Then I saw the name.
Patricia.
My mother-in-law.
No birthday greeting from her had ever ended well.
I answered anyway.
“Happy birthday to me,” I muttered before pressing the green button.
She didn’t bother with hello.
Her voice practically sparkled with excitement.
“I finally did it.”
I frowned.
“Did what?”
“I broke into your house.”
Silence.
Then she laughed.
Not a nervous laugh.
Not an embarrassed laugh.
The kind of laugh someone makes when they believe they’ve won.
“I smashed every picture frame you own.”
Another laugh.
“Your dining table?”
“Destroyed.”
“I poured bleach on your sofa.”
“I ripped every curtain off the windows.”
“I even took a hammer to that ridiculous kitchen island you loved so much.”
She paused dramatically.
“And don’t even ask about your bedroom.”
I leaned back in my chair.
Outside my apartment window, spring sunlight spilled across the parking lot.
Birds chirped.
My coffee was still hot.
My husband was humming while wrapping my birthday present in the next room.
Meanwhile, Patricia sounded like she’d just won the lottery.
“Are you crying yet?” she asked.
“No.”
“I expected more.”
“I wanted you to understand what happens when you disrespect family.”
I blinked once.
Then twice.
“Patricia…”
“What?”
“When exactly did you do this?”
“This morning.”
“Around six.”
“I still had the spare key from Christmas.”
She sounded proud of herself.
“So you admitted breaking into someone else’s property?”
“It’s your property.”
“No.”
She scoffed.
“Don’t lie.”
“I know that house.”
“I’ve been there dozens of times.”
I couldn’t help smiling.
“Patricia…”
“We moved out three months ago.”
The silence that followed was unlike anything I’d ever heard.
Gone was the confidence.
Gone was the satisfaction.
All that remained was breathing.
Slow.
Uneven.
Then she whispered,
“…What?”
“We sold it.”
“Three months ago.”
“No.”
“Yes.”
“I even mailed you our new address.”
“I threw that letter away.”
“I know.”
Another long silence.
Then came the question.
“…Who owns the house now?”
I looked toward my husband.
He had stopped wrapping the gift.
He already knew exactly who was on the phone.
I answered calmly.
“A retired federal judge.”
“And his daughter.”
“She happens to be the county prosecutor.”
The sound Patricia made wasn’t quite a gasp.
It wasn’t quite a scream either.
It was the sound of someone realizing every decision they’d made that morning had just become the biggest mistake of their life.
And the birthday surprise…
Was only beginning.