When The Baby Photos Turned My Mother-In-Law's Lies Against Her-ruby - Chainityai

When The Baby Photos Turned My Mother-In-Law’s Lies Against Her-ruby

Paulette decided I was not good enough for her son before she knew my middle name.

She never threw wine in my face or called me trash across a table.

That would have been easier, because public cruelty gives people something to point at.

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Paulette preferred a softer knife.

She smiled while asking whether my office job had benefits yet.

She called my apartment cozy in a voice that made the word sound like a warning.

She asked whether my parents still lived in the same little house, then glanced at Arlo like he should hear how small my life was.

Arlo heard enough of it to defend me.

He would tell his mother that I was kind, funny, steady, and the person he wanted beside him.

Paulette would lower her eyes and say she was only trying to understand me better.

Then she would do it again the next time we came for dinner.

I married Arlo anyway because I loved the man he was when his mother was not in the room.

For the first year of our marriage, I told myself Paulette would soften once she accepted I was not temporary.

Instead, my pregnancy gave her something sharper to hold.

When I showed Arlo the positive test, he cried so hard I laughed.

At the family dinner where we announced it, everyone hugged us except Paulette.

She asked how far along I was.

I told her eight weeks.

She counted backward on her fingers, slowly enough for the whole table to notice.

Then she said the timing was convenient.

Arlo asked what that meant.

Paulette smiled and said she was only thinking out loud.

Thinking out loud became whispering behind doors.

By my baby shower, Arlo’s cousin Fletcher pulled me aside and asked whether I was okay.

He looked embarrassed before I knew why.

He told me Paulette had been saying I got pregnant on purpose to trap Arlo before he changed his mind about me.

I had done nothing except build a life with my husband, and somehow I had become the villain in a story his mother wrote for me.

That night, I told Arlo everything.

He called Paulette from our living room while I sat on the couch with both hands over my stomach.

She denied it first.

Then she cried.

Then she said Fletcher must have misunderstood her concern.

By the end of the call, Arlo was rubbing his forehead and apologizing for upsetting her.

I did not blame him then.

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