She Found Her Mother-In-Law Wearing Her Cardigan, Then Pulled The Deed-habe

The cardigan was the thing that finally broke Claire Odum.

Not because it was expensive.

It was not.

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Not because it was rare.

It was a soft heather-gray cashmere-blend cardigan she had bought herself the winter before, after a deadline at work had wrung every ounce of patience out of her.

It mattered because it was hers.

That morning, the kitchen smelled like coffee gone bitter in the mug and eggs frying in a skillet Claire had not offered anyone permission to use.

The refrigerator hummed under a row of yellow Post-it notes her mother-in-law had left on the door.

The notes were cheerful.

That made them worse.

Pantry labels.

Laundry instructions.

A reminder that the dishwasher should be loaded a different way.

Marjorie called it help.

Claire knew what it was.

Occupation with a smile.

She stepped into the kitchen and saw Marjorie standing at the quartz counter wearing Claire’s cardigan and Claire’s satin scrunchie while moving the spice jars around with the confidence of a woman rearranging property she believed would soon belong to her.

Ethan sat at the island, staring at his phone.

He did not look up when Claire walked in.

He did not look up when she set her coffee down.

He waited until the silence became a person in the room, then gave her that tired, wounded look that had become his favorite defense.

It was the look that said, Please do not make me uncomfortable by noticing what is happening.

Marjorie turned with a small smile.

“We’re staying indefinitely,” she said. “Harold can’t manage the stairs at our place anymore. You have plenty of room. It only makes sense.”

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