Her In-Laws Demanded Rent—Then Walked Into Her Penthouse-myhoa

Five days after my wedding, my mother-in-law placed a $1,500 rent lease in front of me and smiled like she had just handed down a royal decree.

The paper landed on the dining table with a clean, sharp slap.

The sound was not loud, but it was final.

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It cut through the smell of espresso, the dry scrape of Brad’s spoon in his coffee, and the soft morning hum of the apartment that I was apparently expected to be grateful for.

It was 8:12 on a Tuesday morning.

I know that because my iPad was open beside my breakfast, and the first item on the screen was a quarterly report from one of three subsidiaries Katherine Thompson did not know I owned.

The eggs on my plate had gone cold.

The coffee in Brad’s cup had gone cold, too, though he kept stirring it like a man trying to make himself look occupied.

Katherine had entered without knocking.

That should have bothered me more than it did, but I had been married into the Thompson family for five days, and in those five days I had already learned that Katherine did not think of doors as boundaries.

She thought of them as suggestions for other people.

She stood at the end of the table in a beige coat that probably cost more than my first car and placed her Hermès bag on the chair beside me.

Then she looked around the apartment like she was checking inventory.

The leather chairs.

The glass fixtures.

The abstract painting over the sideboard.

The wife her son had brought home.

Her eyes paused on my navy suit, my laptop bag, my heels by the door, and then my iPad.

“Put away your ridiculous little office toy, Emma,” she said.

I looked down at the screen.

That office toy held payroll plans, acquisition files, lease abstracts, cap tables, tax notes, and one pending contract that would have paid for every polished surface in the room twice over.

But Katherine had never asked what I did.

That was the thing about people who enjoyed looking down on you.

They did not want facts.

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