“Why is this door locked?!” my mother-in-law, Linda, shouted down the hallway of my apartment, pounding so hard on the spare bedroom door that the flimsy frame rattled with every blow.I watched the entire scene unfold on my phone while sitting in my office break room twenty minutes away, one AirPod in my ear, my lunch sitting untouched on the table. My pulse was oddly steady. The camera feed was perfectly clear. Linda had used the emergency key my husband, Ethan, had given her months earlier without asking me. She was supposed to water my plants while I worked a double shift at the dental clinic. Instead, she had gone straight for the one room I had specifically told both of them was off-limits.
That room used to be my office. Later, it became the place where I kept everything I was too exhausted to explain out loud.I nearly laughed but bit the inside of my cheek instead. Hiding from her would’ve been the more accurate description.For two years, Linda had criticized nearly everything I did. The way I cooked. The way I folded laundry. The fact that Ethan washed his own clothes. She called it “helping,” but it was really surveillance disguised as concern. She’d appear without warning, open cabinets, rearrange things, and ask questions that weren’t really questions. Ethan always brushed it off. “That’s just how Mom is,” he’d say, as if that somehow explained why she behaved like my home belonged to her.Three weeks earlier, after Linda showed up and reorganized my entire kitchen while I was in the shower, I finally lost my patience. I changed the lock on the spare room and moved everything important into it: a filing cabinet, labeled storage bins, printed bank statements, copies of text messages, and one long table covered with evidence. Not of an affair. Not anything dramatic. Just the truth.