She Was Thrown Out, Then Her Mother-In-Law Asked For Rent-eirian

The afternoon I was told to leave looked so ordinary that, for a few seconds, I thought I had misunderstood it.

Sunlight came through the narrow stairwell window and spilled across the hallway carpet.

The family photos on the wall caught the light in their glass frames, smiling out like the house was still the kind of place people returned to.

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Outside, somebody was mowing a lawn.

Inside, a casserole dish cooled beside the stove, and the smell of cheese and onion floated through the kitchen as if dinner were the most important thing that could happen that day.

I was standing by the front door, folding one of my sweaters, when my mother-in-law said my name.

“Laura.”

Mrs. Scott had a dish towel in her hands.

She kept smoothing the edge of it between her fingers, over and over, like the fabric could help her make the sentence sound gentle.

“I think it would be better if you found somewhere else to stay,” she said. “Lauren would be more comfortable if things were simpler here.”

For a moment, I waited.

I thought there would be more.

A reason.

A timeline.

Some mention of Jack.

But Mrs. Scott only stood there with that towel in her hands, and behind her, Lauren leaned against the kitchen archway with a coffee mug held in both hands.

Lauren looked calm.

Too calm.

I set my sweater over the back of a chair.

“Do you mean eventually?” I asked.

Mrs. Scott shook her head once.

“An hour should be enough.”

An hour.

That was what almost made me laugh, though nothing about it was funny.

Not the end of the month.

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