When my mother-in-law passed away, I expected grief. What I didn’t expect was relief.
For years, she had made her dislike for me painfully clear. She never hid her disapproval in her glances, her clipped remarks, or the long silences that lingered when I walked into the room. Not once had she offered me the warmth I longed for.
So when the memorial ended and my husband quietly pressed a small box into my hands, my first instinct was confusion.
“She wanted you to have this,” he said. His expression unreadable.
I frowned. “Me? Are you sure?”