That night, I came home drained from work, longing for peace. But the moment I walked in, I knew something was off—boxes everywhere. My chest tightened.
I stepped over a mess of shoes and followed the chaos to the guest room. There she was: Jane, my mother-in-law, unpacking as if this had been the plan all along.
The bed was buried under clothes. Her floral perfume filled the room, and pictures of her cats already adorned the nightstand.
“Mom?” I asked, voice stiff. “What’s happening?”
Without even turning around, she waved her hand. “Oh, didn’t Joe tell you? My house had a little problem—burst pipes. Whole place flooded. I’ll be here for a bit.”
Flooding? That didn’t add up. Her home was recently renovated with top-of-the-line everything. Not a peep of trouble until now.
Before I could dig deeper, Joe appeared behind me, eyes avoiding mine. “Yeah… about that,” he mumbled. “She’ll stay here until the repairs are done.”
“You didn’t think to mention this?” I asked, narrowing my eyes.
He just shrugged. “It’s temporary, babe. You and Mom get along, right?”
Oh, sure—if passive-aggressive comments about how we’ve been married six years with no grandkids counted as “getting along.” I faked a smile. “Of course. Totally fine.”
Later that night, I got up for some water—and walked straight into their whispered conversation in the kitchen.
“You didn’t tell her the real reason, did you?” Jane’s voice sliced through the quiet.
“No, Mom. I didn’t,” Joe sighed.
“Well, someone’s got to investigate why you two haven’t had children yet. Don’t worry, I’ll take care of it.”
My stomach flipped. This wasn’t about plumbing. She came here to snoop, to pressure, to fix us. My blood boiled.
The next morning, I came up with a plan. If Jane wanted to play games, I’d play too—but my way. I wasn’t about to argue. I’d kill her with kindness.
By 8 a.m., I had emptied our master bedroom. Every photo, every article of clothing, all of it crammed into the guest room. I even found Jane’s favorite floral bedspread and laid it out like she was royalty. I added a welcome basket—candles, bath bombs, luxury chocolates. Five-star service.
When Joe came home and found me folding clothes in the guest room, he blinked in confusion. “Why are you in here? Where’s our stuff?”
I smiled sweetly. “I thought your mom should have the master suite. She deserves it, don’t you think?”
His jaw dropped. “You gave her our bedroom?”
“Of course,” I replied. “She’s family. We’ll manage just fine.”
For days, I treated Jane like a VIP. Fresh towels, snacks by her bed, all the lavender-scented candles she adored. She strutted around like the queen of the house.
Meanwhile, Joe was slowly losing his grip. Sharing the cramped guest room was driving him nuts—and that wasn’t even the worst of it. Jane had taken it upon herself to “prepare him” for fatherhood.
Every morning came with a new vitamin regimen.
“You need to take these, Joe,” she’d say. “You want healthy babies, don’t you?”
He rolled his eyes but took them anyway.
She criticized his habits constantly. “TV at night? Not baby-friendly. You should be reading parenting books. And forget video games—dads need discipline.”
By day four, I found Joe slumped on the bed, surrounded by baby books she had ordered.
He held one up—What to Expect When You’re Expecting. “I think I’m losing it,” he muttered.
I bit back a laugh. “Didn’t you say we’d be fine?”
Then came the final straw—Jane handed Joe a “fertility-friendly” grocery list: grilled salmon, kale, quinoa. No pizza. No burgers.
She beamed. “Your future kids will thank you!”
Joe looked at the list like it was a death sentence. “No pizza… ever?”
Dinner that night was kale and dry fish. Jane kept eyeing Joe like he was a science experiment. “Did you take your vitamins? Scheduled your gym time? You’ve put on a little weight…”
I nudged him under the table to keep from bursting into laughter. He looked like he was about to implode.
That night, he rubbed his temples and muttered, “Tiana, I can’t take this anymore.”
I smirked. “It’s kind of funny.”
“It’s not funny.”
“Okay,” I said, laughing. “It’s a little funny.”
Joe flopped onto the bed with a groan. “I booked her a hotel room across the street. This can’t go on.”
The next morning at breakfast, he broke the news.
“Mom, we’ve found you a lovely hotel nearby while your house is being repaired. You’ll be more comfortable there.”
Jane blinked. “But I’m perfectly fine here. Besides, shouldn’t you two be more serious about grandchildren?”
Joe stood firm. “When we’re ready, we’ll handle that. For now, this is best for everyone.”
She stared for a moment, then nodded with a sigh. “If you insist.”
By that evening, she was gone. Peace returned.
As the front door closed behind her, Joe collapsed onto the couch. “Finally.”
I plopped down beside him. “So… kale for dinner?”
He groaned. “Never again.”