When my mother-in-law kicked me, I waited for my husband to defend me. He didn’t. He just said, “Give her what she wants.” So I returned with an envelope of money. “That’s more like it,” she sneered, reaching out. But the second she opened it, she gasped — then fell to the floor. I hadn’t meant to shock her… but what she saw changed everything.
My name is Emily Carter, and until that afternoon, I believed I could somehow survive my marriage to Daniel and his overbearing mother, Helen. I always told myself: Just stay calm. Don’t make things worse. But I didn’t realize “worse” had an entirely different meaning in their world.
Helen had always treated me like an inconvenience—too quiet, too independent, too unwilling to hand over my salary to “support the household,” even though Daniel and I both had full-time jobs. But the moment she barged into our apartment that day, I sensed something different in her eyes. Sharp. Entitled. Angry.
She barely said hello before launching into accusations.
“You think you’re better than us?” she hissed. “Where’s your paycheck? Give it to me now.”
I was stunned. Daniel stood beside her, arms crossed, pretending none of this involved him.
“Helen, I already told you—my salary goes to our savings,” I said firmly.
She stepped closer, face twisted. “Savings? For what? You owe us after everything we’ve done for you.”
Everything? I almost laughed. She had never offered support, only demands.
When I didn’t move, she snapped—and kicked me in the stomach. The force knocked the wind out of me. Daniel didn’t shout, didn’t help, didn’t even flinch. He just shrugged.
“You should’ve given her what she wants,” he muttered.
My hands trembled, but my mind was strangely calm. I looked at both of them—the woman who hurt me and the man who allowed it—and something inside me clicked. Quietly, I stood up and walked toward the bedroom.
I reached into the drawer and pulled out an envelope I had prepared weeks ago—not with money, but with something far more powerful.
When I returned, Helen’s eyes lit up greedily.
“Ah, that’s more like it,” she said, reaching for the envelope. “Bring your salary here.”
She snatched it, tore it open—
—and the second she saw what was inside, her face drained of color.
Then Helen collapsed to the floor, her body hitting the carpet with a heavy thud.
Everything in the room froze.





