Hope never expected her new husband to show up with a plus-one—his mother, Gloria, and two giant suitcases.
“I’m here to help you both adjust,” Gloria said.
Hope was stunned. Scott hadn’t asked or even warned her. “She’s been alone since Dad died,” he explained. Hope agreed to let her stay—two months, max.
But from the start, Gloria treated Hope like an intruder in her own home. She belittled her work-from-home job and judged her space. Then came the breaking point: after a stressful day, Hope reached for comfort—her homemade lentil soup—only for Gloria to smack it out of her hands and yell, “If you don’t work, you don’t eat!”
Stunned and heartbroken, Hope simply said, “Get out of my house.”
When Scott got home, he didn’t ask what happened. He sided with Gloria.
“She wouldn’t make that up,” he said.
“I don’t believe you.”
That was it. Hope calmly told them both to leave. With the help of her ex-military brother and his friends, Gloria and Scott were gone by 1 a.m.
Gloria cursed her on the way out, predicting a life of loneliness and regret.
Hope didn’t respond. She cleaned the kitchen—her kitchen—and felt something she hadn’t in a long time: peace.
The next morning, Scott texted, “You owe my mom an apology.”
Hope replied with one word: “Lawyer.”
The marriage was over. But her home, her boundaries, and her peace? Still hers.