I stood frozen in the doorway, the garment bag still hanging from my hand, watching as my mother-in-law, Diane Carter, ripped the cream silk blouse I had just brought in from the car off its hanger.
She held it up like proof of something unforgivable, her lips tight, her eyes blazing with anger. And then, without hesitation, she tore it straight down the middle.
“Such a waste!” she snapped. “How dare you spend my son’s money on something like this?”
For a moment, I couldn’t even speak.
Yes, the blouse had cost three hundred dollars. But that wasn’t the point. The point was I had paid for it myself—my salary had been deposited that morning into the same account I’d had long before I married Daniel.
The point was that this woman stood in the kitchen of a house in Connecticut that legally belonged to me, destroying something I had worked for.
“I bought that with my own money,” I said slowly, forcing the words out.
Diane laughed, a cold, dismissive sound.
“Everything you have is because of Daniel. Don’t pretend otherwise.”
At that exact moment, Daniel walked in from the patio. He looked at the torn blouse, then at his mother, then at me. He didn’t ask what had happened. He didn’t step in.