My MIL Left the House Every

They say you never really know someone until youโ€™ve lived with them. I thought I knew my mother-in-law,but everything changed when I decided to follow her. What I uncovered wasnโ€™t just a secret;it was a ticking time bomb that threatened the peace of our home.

I used to think my life was predictable, with its comforting routine.

I worked as a freelance graphic designer, which gave me the flexibility to be home most days while still bringing in a decent income.

Xander, my husband, worked long hours at his law firm, so I often had the house to myself.

It was peaceful until my mother-in-law, Cordelia, moved in three months ago.After her husband passed away,

she called us one night, her voice trembling.

โ€œOlive, dearโ€ฆ I donโ€™t know how to do this on my own,โ€ sheโ€™d sobbed over the phone.

โ€œThe house is so empty, so lonelyโ€ฆ I just need to be around my family.โ€

I glanced at Xander, and he nodded, looking concerned. We agreed to let Cordelia move in;

it felt like the right thing to do for a grieving woman whoโ€™d just lost her partner of 40 years.

But from the start, something felt off.Cordelia had always been a little strange,

but now her behavior was unpredictable. Every Thursday, she would leave early in the morning and

return late in the evening, her clothes carrying a terrible stench: something rotten and damp,

like decay. It lingered, clinging to the air and making me question what she was really up to.

โ€œMom, where were you today?โ€ Xander asked her one Thursday evening as she shuffled into the kitchen,

her eyes avoiding ours. I stood by the stove, pretending to stir a pot of soup, trying not to wrinkle my nose at the smell.

โ€œOh, just out with some old friends,โ€ she said, waving a hand dismissively, her smile tight and unconvincing.

โ€œEvery Thursday?โ€ I asked, keeping my tone casual. โ€œThat must be some social circle.โ€

She glanced at me, her eyes lingering a moment too long, then shrugged. โ€œWe like to meet regularly.

Itโ€™s good for the soul, you know, catching up with old friends.โ€

But that smell โ€” it was like sheโ€™d been crawling through a sewer. The scent lingered long after sheโ€™d passed,

a pungent blend of garbage and something wet and decayed. I could feel my curiosity gnawing at me,

the way you canโ€™t help but poke at a sore tooth.

One Wednesday night, I couldnโ€™t take it anymore. โ€œXander,โ€ I whispered, nudging him awake.

โ€œAre you seriously buying that story?โ€

He blinked sleepily. โ€œWhat story?โ€


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