Stories
My MIL Started Coming to Our House in Latex Gloves, Saying She Was Disgusted to Touch Anything – The Truth Was Much Worse
January 13, 2025
When Marilyn agreed to leave her own house every weekend so her husband could spend time with his son, she thought she was being understanding. But after months of this arrangement, she returned home unexpectedly and saw what was truly happening.
I thought my six-month marriage to Scott was built on solid ground. We had dated for two years before tying the knot, and during that time, I had gotten to know his six-year-old son, Ben.
A woman and man smiling while walking down a street | Source: Midjourney
The boy was sweet and shy, with his father's blonde hair and a smile that could melt ice. His mother Patricia seemed fine with me then. She would even chat with me during drop-offs, asking about my job as a high school teacher.
"You're so good with Ben," she had said once, watching him show me his latest Lego creation. "It's nice that he has another positive influence in his life."
That pleasantry changed after the wedding. I saw less and less of her, and months later, Scott dropped a bomb on me.
A woman in a living room looking pensative | Source: Midjourney
It was a quiet spring Tuesday evening, and we were both busy around the kitchen. I was making dinner and looking at the lovely rain outside through the window.
He was trying to fix one of the cabinet handles that had snapped off the day earlier.
Suddenly, he cleared his throat and I turned my head, raising my eyebrows.
"Honey, I think it would be better if you went to your parents' on weekends," Scott began, still focused on the cabinet.
I blinked. "I'm sorry. What? Why?"
A woman standing in front of a stove looking back confused | Source: Midjourney
He sighed and straightened, fidgeting with the handle on his hands. "Patricia doesn't want Ben around you anymore. She says it'll confuse him. If she finds out you're here when Ben visits, she'll make things difficult. I just want peace."
I dropped the cutting knife and grabbed a kitchen towel to clean my hands.
"I don't understand," I started. "Ben and I get along great. He loved the science experiments we did last weekend. Remember how excited he was when we made that volcano? He learned so much. Plus, he loves my cooking."
A kid laughing as a science project volcano erupts on a table in the living room | Source: Midjourney
"I know, I know," Scott placed the handle on the counter and ran his hands through his salt-and-pepper hair. "It's just… she says it's different because we’re married now, and she doesn't want Ben to think you're his mother too."
"I'm his stepmother, so…"
"I know. It's ridiculous. But it's temporary until Patricia calms down. Please? You know how she can be when she doesn't get her way. She's threatening to reduce my time with Ben."
A woman standing next to a small boy in front of a car in a suburban neighborhood | Source: Midjourney
"So your solution is to kick your wife out of her own house every weekend?" I frowned, putting the kitchen towel back in its place. "Scott, this is insane."
"Not kick out," he backpedaled. "Just... take a little break on weekends. Visit your parents. They'd love to see you more, right?"
It felt wrong, but I didn't want to be the reason Scott lost time with his son. I felt forced to agree.
So that Friday, I packed my overnight bag and drove to my parents' house 20 minutes away, past familiar neighborhoods and the park where Scott had proposed.
A woman packing clothes in a suitcase | Source: Pexels
Mom opened the door and immediately, her forehead creased with concern. "Marilyn? What are you doing here? What's going on?"
"Sorry for not calling before. I'm just visiting for the weekend," I said, forcing a smile as I made my way inside. "I thought I should spend some quality time with my favorite parents."
She let me in without a word, although I could tell she didn't believe me. I was glad she let it go that night, but on Saturday morning, over breakfast, she asked me for the truth.
A plate of breakfast | Source: Pexels
I had to tell her what Scott requested.
"Why are YOU the one leaving? It's your house," she said while buttering her toast with forced, angry movements. "When I was your age, Henry would never have asked me to leave our home. Not for anyone."
"It's just temporary," I lied, pushing my eggs around the plate. "Patricia's going through some things. It's easier this way."
"Easier for whom?" Mom's voice was gentle but firm. "Honey, something about this doesn't feel right."
An older woman sitting at a table with toast on her plate, frowning | Source: Midjourney
"I know, but can we just let it go," I mumbled, and luckily, Mom nodded.
But a few weekends turned into every single one, and then months had gone by.
Every Friday, I packed my bags, like I was being evicted from my house, the one I bought before I even met Scott.
A nice house in the suburbs | Source: Midjourney
It wasn't fair, and according to him, Patricia liked this arrangement, so we had to keep it up. He constantly reassured me that he loved me only and hated that his ex was acting this way.
But we had to go along for Ben's well-being.
I wanted to understand badly because he always sounded so sincere, and I loved him and his son. But how much more was I supposed to take? I didn't know when I would break.
A woman sitting in bed at night looking thoughtful | Source: Midjourney
Well, it happened on a Friday. I was only five minutes away from my parents' house when the thought "Are you an idiot?" entered my mind. Why was I taking this? This wasn't normal!
I couldn't justify this strange arrangement anymore, so I made a dangerous U-turn, hauling back to my house. I parked in our driveway and used my key to open the front door.
From outside, I could tell that the house was too quiet for a Friday night with a six-year-old who loved blasting cartoons on the TV.
A house at night | Source: Pexels
But I realized what was truly happening as soon as I stepped into my living room. First, Ben was nowhere to be seen.
Instead, I saw Scott on our couch with one arm casually draped around Patricia. She was wearing my pajamas, the ones I just bought that were a little on the pricier side.
"What the hell is going on?" I demanded.
With an expletive, Scott jumped up from the sofa and hit his knee on the coffee table. "Marilyn! You're... you're supposed to be at your parents'," he said, limping toward me.
A man looks ashamed while a blonde woman sits on a couch behind him, surprised | Source: Midjourney
I wasn't looking at him. My gaze was on Patricia, who hadn't moved. She was just smirking as she ran a hand through the silk of the pajama shirt. "Well, well. Looks like someone went off-script."
"Where's Ben?" I asked.
"At my mother's," Patricia replied smoothly, crossing her legs. "He's always at my mother's on Friday. They have a special movie night. Didn't Scott tell you?" She turned to him with mock concern. "Oh, darling, don't tell me you've been lying to your new wife?"
An older woman and her grandson sitting on a couch, smiling | Source: Midjourney
The pieces clicked into place. "This was never about Ben, was it?"
"Smart girl." Patricia smiled and stood. "I told Scott that if he wanted another chance with me, I needed weekends to see if we could fix things. Sending you away was his idea, though," she shrugged. "He's always been good at finding... creative solutions."
I laughed, a hollow sound. "That's interesting because Scott told me something very different." I pulled out my phone and hit play on a recording from last week.
A woman holding up a phone in a living room at night | Source: Midjourney
I don't know why I had recorded it secretly, but at that moment, I was glad. I knew my relationship was over, but they weren't going to run happily into the sunset either.
Scott's voice filled the room: "I love you, Marilyn. Patricia is just being her typical self. Selfish and petty. I'm only doing this until Ben's a bit older and can understand things better. Things will go back to normal soon for us, and then, we can think about having our own children. You're the love of my life."
Patricia's lips twisted when I put my phone down. Suddenly, she bent, grabbed her slipper, and threw it at Scott. "You lying piece of garbage! All this time, you've been playing both sides? You're pathetic!"
A comfy slipper flying through the air | Source: Midjourney
He ducked, and the slipper hit a porcelain decoration on our mantelpiece, toppling it over and making it shatter on my floor. I didn't care. It was an ugly thing his mother had given me.
But then, Patricia moved, taking her purse before pushing me away from the front door and exiting my house.
"Feel free to keep my pajamas. I know you can't afford them!" I yelled, aiming for maximum pettiness.
She froze for a second but kept walking without a backward glance. Once she was out of sight, I walked upstairs to our bedroom with Scott following and pleading desperately behind me.
A woman going up the stairs in a house with a man following behind her, looking sad | Source: Midjourney
Ignoring him, I went to his closet, grabbed his precious polo shirts, and threw them out the window.
"What are you doing?!" he shouted.
"If you get any closer to me," I began, putting up my hand to stop him, "I will scream my head off, and you know the old gossip in front will call the police."
"Please, Marilyn," Scott stepped back, helpless. But I didn't listen.
His expensive suits followed, then his dress shoes, his watch collection, his golf clubs, and his travel suitcases.
Clothes and other belongings scattered on the front lawn of a house at night | Source: Midjourney
"Now, go pick that junk off my lawn and get out of my life," I said in a dangerously calm voice.
"Please, listen," he tried begging one last time. "I was only thinking about Ben. I wasn't playing both sides. I was only playing her."
"SHUT UP AND GET OUT OF MY HOUSE!"
A woman yelling in a bedroom in front of a window at night | Source: Midjourney
The sound was so loud that I'm sure the neighbors heard it. He stared into my eyes for a final moment, and his shoulder sagged. At last, he left.
Some curious neighbors gathered on their porches to watch as Scott gathered his scattered belongings. Before he drove away in his car, he turned back one last time.
People on their porches in a suburban neighborhood at night | Source: Midjourney
"Marilyn, please. We can work this out. I'll tell you everything," he insisted, his voice cracking. "I never meant to hurt you. I was just trying to make everyone happy."
"I don't want to hear anything from you except through lawyers," I replied and shut the front door.
I leaned my back against it and breathed deeply as the adrenaline finally left my body.
A woman leaning back on a door, looking peaceful and smiling | Source: Midjourney
A minute later, my phone vibrated in my pocket with a message from my mom. She must have been worried that I never made it to her house.
"Everything okay? You never made it here."
I smiled and typed back: "Everything's perfect, Mom. No one is ever kicking me out of my place again."
A woman in a living room, smiling while texting | Source: Midjourney
Here's another story: Three years after my husband abandoned our family for his glamorous mistress, I stumbled upon them in a moment that felt like poetic justice. It wasn't their downfall that satisfied me. It was the strength I had found in myself to move forward and thrive without them.
This work is inspired by real events and people, but it has been fictionalized for creative purposes. Names, characters, and details have been changed to protect privacy and enhance the narrative. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
The author and publisher make no claims to the accuracy of events or the portrayal of characters and are not liable for any misinterpretation. This story is provided "as is," and any opinions expressed are those of the characters and do not reflect the views of the author or publisher.