The irony was almost funny.
Because I had paid for that house.
Legally, completely, entirely mine—purchased before the marriage and protected in every way that mattered.
She thought I was living under her son’s roof.
In reality, she was living under mine.
I reached my limit on a Thursday afternoon.
I had just finished a tense call and walked into the kitchen, trying to breathe. Several packages had arrived—campaign samples—and Margaret was already staring at them like they offended her personally.
Then she looked at me and said,
“People who don’t work always find shameless ways to waste other people’s money.”
Something in me went still.
I didn’t smile this time.
“You need to stop speaking to me like that,” I said calmly.
She didn’t like that.
Not at all.
Before I could react, she grabbed the kettle from the stove—and threw boiling water at me.
The pain was immediate. Sharp. Blinding.