My mother-in-law blocked the doorway of my new apartment and screamed that her son had bought it for her, ordering me to leave.

Act I: The Satin Usurper

I believe that every home has a specific, invisible signature—a combination of the scent of your favorite laundry detergent, the way the light hits the floorboards at four in the afternoon, and the profound, heavy silence that greets you when you close the world out. When I stepped into Unit 12B after six weeks in Boston, that signature had been erased.

The air smelled of cheap lavender air freshener and burnt toast. The light, usually filtered through my minimalist linen curtains, was now struggling against heavy, velvet drapes that looked like they belonged in a funeral parlor. And the silence? The silence was gone, replaced by the jarring sound of a television blaring a daytime soap opera.

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“Leave now or I’ll call the police! My son bought this apartment for me!”

The voice cut through the air like a rusty blade. I stood in the foyer, my knuckles white as I gripped the handles of my two Rimowa suitcases. I was thirty-one, exhausted from sleeping in a hospital chair while my sister recovered from a grueling surgery, and I was looking at my mother-in-law, Lorraine Whitmore, as if she were a hallucination.

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She was standing in the center of my living room—my sanctuary—wearing a peach-colored satin robe that I recognized as a gift Daniel had supposedly bought for me last Christmas. Her hair was pinned up in those aggressive pink rollers that looked like plastic rollers of ammunition. In her hand was a hand-painted ceramic mug. Not just any mug. It was the one my grandmother had given me before she passed, the one I used only on mornings when I needed a little extra courage.

“Lorraine?” I whispered, my voice sounding thin even to my own ears. “What are you doing in my apartment?”

“Your apartment?” She laughed, a high, screeching sound that made my skin crawl. She set the mug down on my marble coffee table—no coaster, of course—and walked toward me with the practiced gait of a woman who believed she was royalty. “Daniel told me you might be delusional when you got back. The stress of your sister’s ‘condition’ must have finally snapped that fragile little mind of yours.”

Continue to Part 2 Part 1 of 3
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