My DIL often dumps her 7 y.o. twins at my place. They refuse my cooking.
I told her, “Feed your kids before you come!” She chuckled. The next day, I came home and froze when I saw my DIL in my living room. To my horror, she was standing by my hallway cabinet—its drawer open, my late husband’s coin collection spread across the top.
She didn’t hear me at first. She was too busy flipping through the little velvet cases, the kind that snap shut with a soft click. I’d arranged them myself after Dev passed.
Each coin had a story. The Swiss franc he brought back from a layover. The silver rupee from his grandfather.
She picked them up like poker chips. When I finally made a sound—just a soft, “Farah?”—she jumped so hard she knocked one of the velvet trays off the side. Coins scattered like tiny cymbals across the hardwood floor.
“Oh!” she said, hand flying to her chest like she was in some kind of play. “You scared me! I was just—just looking.
These are… beautiful.”
I didn’t say anything. Just walked over, crouched down, and started picking up the coins. She crouched too, fake-helping, her long nails clinking on metal.
“I didn’t know Dev collected these,” she said casually, like I hadn’t caught her red-handed. “My husband,” I said, “not your father-in-law.”
“Oh. Right.” She smiled like she always does when she doesn’t get her way.
Tight-lipped. Controlled. The same smile she gives her kids when they throw tantrums.
I stood up. “Why are you in my house, Farah? The girls aren’t even with you.”
She blinked.
“Oh! I thought you were home. I knocked.”
My front door’s old, but I’d have heard a knock.
She was lying. And I knew it. And I think she knew I knew it.
“I needed a quiet place to take a call,” she added, voice suddenly high-pitched. “The twins were being… loud at home.”
So instead of parenting, she broke into my house? I didn’t say it.
I just said, “Please don’t come in when I’m not here.”
And she gave me that smile again. “Of course.”
She left, and I stood there for a long time, just watching the spot where she’d been. My gut felt off.
Not fear, exactly. More like sadness. Disappointment.
The next morning, I bought a little latch lock from the hardware store and installed it myself. I’m 63, and I’ve learned how to do a lot of things by necessity. The latch wasn’t fancy, but it made me feel better.
The story doesn’t end here –
it continues on the next page.
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