“How are you buying an apartment? After everything we’ve done for you! Traitors!” his parents-in-law raged.

  “I told you—don’t run the dishwasher after ten. The whole house vibrates, and I can’t relax!” Natalya froze with a plate in her hands. Vladimir Sergeyevich stood in the doorway, pulling his terry robe tighter. His gray hair was sticking up in every direction, flattened from the couch. “I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to…” … Read more

— So what if the house is yours? You’re packing your things right now and going to apologize to my mother!

  In the spacious living room of the old house Lina had inherited from her grandmother, Anton irritably flung a set of e-tickets onto the table. The weak December sun filtered through the tall windows, catching the restored ceiling moldings—proof of the months of work Lina had poured into the place. “They’re already on the … Read more

Oh no, my dear, your mother will not set foot in my house again! And if you don’t like it, you can follow her.

  Listen, Valera, I’m telling you again, meet your mother anywhere you like, but I don’t want to see her in our house! I’m tired of going through the same thing every time! Whenever your mom comes over, something inexplicable always starts happening! She’s always meddling, trying to impose her own rules here, even yelling … Read more

Olga was sorting through paperwork at her desk when her secretary, Lena, peeked into the office with a frightened look.

  Olga was sorting through papers on her desk when Lena, her secretary, peeked into the office with a frightened look. “Olga Viktorovna, there’s… a woman here to see you,” Lena said, hesitating. “She says she’s your… relative. And she’s being very insistent.” Olga looked up from the documents. The reception area of her advertising … Read more

“On His Mother’s Advice, My Husband Put Us on Separate Finances—and Started Eating Dinner at Her Place”

  Svetlana set her coffee cup on the windowsill and stared at the rain outside. The drops slid down the glass like tears she refused to let herself shed. October had been especially awful this year—dull, clammy, and heavy with gloom. Exactly like her life for the past six months. “Svet, are you even listening?” … Read more

“Cook for yourself—I’m not your maid anymore,” I snapped, and threw my kitchen apron right in my husband’s face

 The apron flew into Andrey’s face so fast he didn’t even have time to flinch. The fabric—bright and cheerful with red poppies—smacked his cheek and then slid lazily to the floor. “Lena, have you completely lost it?” he blurted, picking it up and smoothing it out, as if pressing the wrinkles away could undo what … Read more

“You gave my fridge to your mommy? Fine—go live with her.” — I dumped my husband’s things on the landing

Marina first spotted it in an appliance store three years earlier. A double-door model in warm ivory, with chrome handles and pull-out freezer drawers at the bottom. It stood in the far corner under gentle showroom lights and looked less like a refrigerator and more like a doorway into a different life—one where a woman … Read more

“Why is your wife acting like she’s the lady of the house—this isn’t even her apartment!” the mother-in-law and sister-in-law fumed

“Lizzie, where are you? We’re already here!” Liza stopped short in the doorway of her own apartment, keys still in her hand. Her mother-in-law’s voice carried from the kitchen—brisk, loud, and possessive, the way someone sounds when they feel at home. Liza slowly slipped off her shoes and walked down the hallway. At her table … Read more

“You’re signing the apartment over to your mother? Fine—then I’m signing something too: a divorce petition,” the daughter-in-law told her husband.

 Her mother-in-law walked into the apartment without calling—like she always did. She’d had a key from day one, back when Denis first brought Natasha to that cramped two-bedroom Khrushchev-era flat. Five years ago, Valentina Petrovna had smiled sweetly and said, “Just in case, kids—what if you need help urgently?” Now the key wasn’t “help.” It … Read more