If she needs money again, she can call the bank, not me,” Maria snapped, deleting her mother-in-law’s number from her phone.

You’ve got that sour face again. Maybe you should see a gastroenterologist?” Maria smirked without even turning around. She was chopping onions for a salad, but her hand trembled, and the knife struck the wooden cutting board with a dull thud. “Did you even hear what I said?” Alexey stepped closer and placed his palms … Read more

I Bought This Apartment for My Granddaughter. And Who Are You Here — a Parasite?” — Grandfather Asked One Question and Kicked Out Her Husband and His Mother

I bought this apartment for my granddaughter. And who are you here — a parasite?” Grandpa asked one question and threw her husband and his mother out. “Where did you put the cufflinks?” Mikhail stood in the bedroom doorway, clutching an empty velvet box. Elena turned away from the window. “What cufflinks?” “The silver ones, … Read more

So my dear brother gets the apartment, and I get the debts?” I couldn’t hold back and slammed my hand on the notary’s desk.

The notary adjusted his glasses and looked into the documents again. I watched his neat hands with well-groomed nails and thought of my mother’s hands—worked raw, always calloused, with broken nails. She never painted them. She used to say, “It would peel off at the dacha anyway.” At the dacha. That damned dacha. “So, according … Read more

Give birth to the child and leave it at the maternity hospital, because I’m moving in with you permanently and taking the nursery,” the mother-in-law declared without blinking.

Lera was sitting on the floor in the small room, moving baby clothes from one box to another. Her eighth month of pregnancy was making itself felt—her back ached, her legs were swollen—but she didn’t want to leave the work unfinished. Tiny onesies with little bunnies, soft swaddling cloths, rattles—all of it lay around her, … Read more

My boy landed on his feet — he got married and immediately got an apartment! Now I’ll have somewhere to stay in the city too!” the husband’s mother said with satisfaction.

Olga stood by the window, watching the first snow settle on the roofs of the neighboring houses. The apartment had come from her grandfather — a two-room place in an old brick building with high ceilings and creaking parquet floors. Her grandfather had lived there for more than thirty years, and every corner preserved his … Read more

— “I’ll dump her, and the three-room apartment downtown will be ours. Half of it is definitely mine!” the husband rejoiced.

A three-room apartment in the very center of the city had come to Tatiana from her grandmother, Klavdia Petrovna. The old woman had left her granddaughter not only the home itself, but all the furniture as well — an antique sideboard, a carved dining table, and mahogany bookcases. Every item preserved the memory of the … Read more

Lena had always known the value of her apartment. Not in rubles, but in the meaning her late father had given it when he used to say, “Daughter, this is your fortress. As long as you have a place of your own, you don’t have to bow to anyone.”

Lena had always known the value of her apartment. Not in rubles, but in the meaning her late father had put into it when he used to say, “Daughter, this is your fortress. As long as you have your own corner, you don’t have to bow to anyone.” The two-room apartment on the fourth floor … Read more

Just because you’re my husband’s mother doesn’t give you the right to poison my life!” Katya shouted.

Just because you’re my husband’s mother doesn’t give you the right to poison my life!” Katya shouted. Katya checked the time on her phone and nodded with satisfaction. There was an hour and a half left before the guests arrived—just enough time to finish the last preparations. Today marked exactly two years of her and … Read more