Alina struggled to open the door, shifting the heavy grocery bags from one hand to the other. Friday evening—the end of a long week—and the only thing she wanted was a hot bath and silence. But the moment she stepped inside, her foot struck someone’s huge backpack lying right in the entryway.
“What is this?” she muttered, peering into the dim light.
Loud voices and laughter spilled in from the living room. Her heart lurched—someone was here. She walked slowly down the hallway and froze in the kitchen doorway.
Three strangers were sprawled around the table. Her mother-in-law, Lidiya Petrovna, was pouring tea with a wide smile, as if nothing unusual were happening.
“Oh, Alina, finally!” she exclaimed without even turning around. “Come on, meet everyone!”
Alina set the bags on the floor, feeling a pulse start pounding at her temples.
“Who are they?” she asked evenly, though inside she was already boiling.
“My sister, Galina, her husband Vasily, and their son Stepan,” her mother-in-law announced proudly, as if introducing honored guests. “They came to stay with us!”
Aunt Galya—a plump woman with bright red nails—gave a lazy nod without looking up from her phone. Uncle Vasya, chewing something, only grunted. Stepa, a man around thirty with a dead cigarette tucked behind his ear, looked Alina up and down like he was appraising her.
“Where’s Maksim?” Alina asked, trying not to look at the mess in the kitchen: dirty dishes, crumbs on the table, an open jar of pickles someone was eating straight out of with their fingers.
“At work, of course,” her mother-in-law waved it off. “He knew they were coming.”
“And why didn’t I know?”
For a second, the kitchen went quiet. Lidiya Petrovna set the kettle down slowly and finally turned toward her daughter-in-law.
“We’re family! What warning do you need?”
“But we don’t even have enough food for everyone!” Alina couldn’t hold it in.
Her mother-in-law snorted, as if she’d heard something funny.
“What, are you stingy? We didn’t come to a restaurant—we’ll manage.”
Aunt Galya finally lifted her eyes from the phone and grumbled, “Oh, come on, why are you yelling? We’re not bums. We brought potatoes and pickles.”
Alina glanced at the bags thrown into a corner—yes, a dirty sack of potatoes was sticking out of one.
“Where are they going to sleep?” she asked, feeling her voice start to tremble.
“Well, Stepa will take the couch in the living room, and Galya and Vasya will sleep in the guest room,” Lidiya Petrovna answered calmly.
“In the guest room? But that’s where the baby’s things are! Toys, the stroller…”
“We’ll move it somewhere,” her mother-in-law waved her hand. “The kid’s little anyway—she won’t care.”
Alina clenched her fists. The guest room was her calm space—her daughter’s crib, the changing table, everything neatly arranged. And now it was all supposed to be shoved into a pile to make room for people she hadn’t even invited?
“Fine,” she said through her teeth. “I’ll be right back.”
She turned and walked out into the hallway. Behind her, she immediately heard a chuckle:
“So sensitive…”
Alina closed her eyes for a second, then pulled out her phone and called Maksim.
“You knew?” she whispered as soon as he picked up.
“I did,” he said after a pause. “Mom said you were aware.”
“I was aware?!” Her voice shook. “Maksim, your aunt is sitting in my kitchen eating my food, and your cousin is planning to sleep on our couch!”
“Sweetheart, they’re relatives…” he started.
“And I’m not your relative?!”
Silence on the line. Then a sigh.
“Okay. I’ll be home soon—we’ll deal with it.”
Alina lowered the phone. Nothing. No support, no protection. She lifted her eyes and saw Stepa shamelessly picking his teeth with her fork.
In that moment she understood: this was going to be a long evening.
Alina stood in the bathroom, splashing her face with ice-cold water. Drops ran down her cheeks, mixing with tears she was barely holding back. On the other side of the door came loud laughter, clinking dishes, and heavy footsteps—like a herd of elephants had moved into the apartment.
She inhaled deeply, wiped her face with a towel, and stepped into the hallway. From the living room she heard her mother-in-law’s voice:
“Stepa, don’t throw your things around—people live here!”
“Oh, come on, auntie, it’s not a museum!” came a hoarse laugh in response.
Alina looked into the room and stopped dead in the doorway.
Stepa was sprawled on her favorite couch, cracking sunflower seeds and tossing the shells straight onto the floor. Uncle Vasya had taken off his shoes and made himself comfortable in an armchair with his bare feet propped up on the coffee table. And Aunt Galya… Aunt Galya was rummaging through Alina’s display cabinet, examining porcelain figurines.
“What are you doing?” Alina blurted.
Aunt Galya turned around, still holding a crystal vase.
“Oh! Is this not allowed? Such a pretty thing—I thought it was a souvenir.”
“That was a gift from my mother,” Alina said through clenched teeth, taking the vase from her. “And anyway—those are my things.”
An awkward silence hung in the room for a moment.
“What an attitude,” Uncle Vasya snorted, scratching his stomach. “We’re not thieves—can’t we just look?”
Alina felt goosebumps run down her back. She turned and nearly collided with her mother-in-law, who was carrying a stack of Alina’s clean towels into the room.
“Lidiya Petrovna, those are my towels from the closet!”
“So what?” her mother-in-law answered indifferently. “Guests need something to dry off with. You want them to use dirty ones?”
Alina clenched her fists.
“I have special guest towels! In the bottom drawer!”
“Oh, what difference does it make,” her mother-in-law waved her off and kept handing them out.
At that moment the doorbell rang.
“That must be Maksim,” her mother-in-law brightened and went to open it.
Alina remained standing in the middle of the room, feeling like a stranger in her own home. A minute later her husband walked in. He looked tired, but he was smiling.
“Well, did you meet everyone?” he asked cheerfully, looking at the relatives.
“Oh, yeah,” Alina muttered through her teeth.
“Oh, Maksim!” Uncle Vasya perked up. “We’ve settled in at your place.”
“I see, I see,” Maksim nodded, taking off his jacket. “How was the drive?”
“Fine—only your wife is kind of nervous,” Stepa smirked, shoving another handful of seeds into his mouth.
Maksim glanced at Alina, but she turned away.
“Okay,” he sighed. “Alina, let’s talk in the kitchen.”
They stepped into the hallway.
“Why are you so tense?” Maksim asked quietly.
“Are you serious?” Alina fought to keep her voice down. “Do you see what’s happening here?”
“Well, family came over—so what…”
“They’re acting like pigs!” she hissed. “Stepa’s littering, Aunt Galya is digging through my things, and your mother is handing out my towels!”
“They don’t mean anything by it,” Maksim tried to calm her. “They’re just different—village people.”
“I’m not going to tolerate this in my house!”
“Sweetheart, just put up with it for a couple days…”
“And I’m not family?!”
Maksim fell silent, thrown off. Just then, a loud crack came from the living room.
Alina spun around and rushed in.
On the floor lay a shattered porcelain figurine—the one her grandmother had given her. Aunt Galya stood nearby with a guilty expression.
“Oh… it fell by itself…”
Alina didn’t say a word. She turned and walked out of the room, slamming the door.
Behind her, her mother-in-law’s voice rang out:
“What a temperament! It’s just some trinket…”
Alina shut her eyes. She knew—this was only the beginning.
Alina woke to strange noises in the kitchen. The clock read 6:30 a.m.—she didn’t even get up that early for work. Throwing on a robe, she stepped out of the bedroom and froze in horror.
In the hallway stood Stepa in nothing but underwear, scratching his stomach. When he saw Alina, he didn’t even look embarrassed.
“Oh, the hostess is awake!” he rasped with a laugh. “Want some tea?”
Alina quickly looked away, heat flooding her body with outrage. She went to the kitchen, where Aunt Galya was already cooking like she owned the place.
“Good morning,” Alina said through clenched teeth.
“Oh, you’re up already,” Aunt Galya tossed back indifferently, flipping eggs in the pan. “We thought you’d sleep till noon.”
Alina silently opened the fridge—half of the fresh groceries she’d bought yesterday were already gone. On the table sat an open jar of her homemade jam, with someone’s spoon already dipped inside.
“Couldn’t you… ask what you’re allowed to take?” Alina asked, barely holding herself together.
Aunt Galya turned, eyebrows raised in surprise.
“What do you mean? We’re not strangers! In the village everything’s shared—whoever gets there first wins.”
Suddenly her daughter cried out from the bathroom. Alina rushed in and saw Uncle Vasya shaving in front of the mirror—with Alina’s razor.
“What are you doing?!” she cried, snatching her daughter into her arms.
“Why are you yelling?” Uncle Vasya looked genuinely surprised. “I grabbed a razor—forgot mine in the suitcase.”
“That’s my personal razor!”
“So what? I’m not syphilitic,” he laughed, continuing to shave.
Alina walked out and slammed the door. In the hallway she ran into her mother-in-law.
“Why are you making everyone nervous first thing in the morning?” Lidiya Petrovna frowned.
“They’re using my things. My razor,” Alina whispered, breathless.
“Oh, stop it,” her mother-in-law waved it off. “A tiny household issue. Better go eat—Galya cooked.”
Everyone was already at the table. Alina carefully sat on the edge of a chair when Stepa suddenly handed her a mug.
“Here, drink up, hostess.”
She took it automatically—then froze. It was her favorite mug, a gift from a friend. And at the bottom… dark flakes floated in the tea.
“What is this?” she asked, pushing it away in disgust.
“Herbal mix,” Aunt Galya explained. “For potency. Stepa always drinks it.”
Alina stood abruptly, almost tipping the chair.
“I’m going to take a shower,” she said through her teeth.
In the bathroom another surprise awaited: all her expensive shampoos and gels were open, and her favorite towel lay wet on the floor. Alina inhaled deeply, counting to ten.
When she returned to the bedroom, Maksim was just waking up.
“What happened?” he asked sleepily, seeing her pale face.
“Your relatives…” Alina began, but the door swung open without a knock.
Aunt Galya walked in wearing one of Alina’s dresses—the one she saved for special occasions.
“Oh, you’re already up!” she said brightly. “Maksim, your wife has such a nice dress! I tried it on—it fits perfectly.”
Alina went numb. Maksim stared from his aunt to his wife, lost.
“Galya, maybe you shouldn’t…” he started.
“Oh, why is everyone acting like strangers?” Aunt Galya laughed. “In the village we borrow everything from each other!”
Without a word, Alina grabbed a bag and began stuffing clothes into it.
“Where are you going?” Maksim asked, panicked.
“To a hotel,” she answered coldly. “As long as your ‘family’ lives here, I’m not staying.”
“Oh, come on,” Aunt Galya said, flopping onto the bed. “What hotels? Money down the drain. We’re not staying forever.”
Alina stopped and looked her straight in the eyes.
“Get out of my bedroom. Now.”
Her mother-in-law appeared in the doorway.
“Alina, what’s that tone? We’re guests!”
“Guests who don’t know boundaries,” Alina said firmly. “Out. All of you.”
When the door finally closed, Alina sank onto the bed, covering her face with trembling hands. Maksim carefully sat beside her.
“Sweetheart…”
“No,” she cut him off. “Either they leave today, or I leave. Choose.”
There was such steel in her voice that for the first time in days, Maksim truly got scared.
Alina sat in the kitchen gripping a cup of tea that had gone cold long ago. Through the wall came loud laughter—the guests were watching TV at full volume. Maksim had gone to work, promising to “sort it out tonight,” but Alina no longer believed him.
She checked the time—she had to pick up her daughter from daycare in two hours. The fridge was nearly empty, so she’d have to go to the store.
“Just don’t touch the cake…” she whispered, opening the refrigerator.
And froze.
On the shelf where that morning a beautiful box with a bakery cake had stood—ordered for the daycare performance—there was only an empty cardboard box. Crumbs. Smears of cream. Finger marks.
“Who…” Her voice shook. “Who ate the cake?”
From the living room came voices:
“Oh man, that cake was awesome!” Stepa laughed. “Haven’t eaten one like that in forever!”
“Well, at least the daughter-in-law did something right,” Aunt Galya added.
Alina walked slowly into the hallway, her hands trembling.
“That cake was for a child,” she said quietly from the living room doorway. “For the performance.”
Silence fell for a beat. Her mother-in-law recovered first.
“So what? You’ll buy another.”
“It had to be ordered a week in advance!” Alina’s voice broke into a shout. “Have you completely lost your minds?!”
Aunt Galya snorted. “Oh please. Sweets are bad for kids. She’ll get diabetes.”
“You…” Alina clenched her fists. “You came into my home, ate my food, used my things—and now you stole a child’s cake?!”
Her mother-in-law stood up, her face red with anger.
“How dare you speak to your elders like that?! We’re not strangers—we’re family!”
“Family?” Alina laughed, but there wasn’t a trace of joy in it. “Family doesn’t behave like a herd of animals!”
“Listen,” her mother-in-law stepped closer, jabbing a finger in the air. “You will apologize to everyone right now!”
Alina looked at her, then at the others—Stepa smirked, Uncle Vasya stared at the TV like it wasn’t his problem, and Aunt Galya shook her head with offended innocence.
“Fine,” Alina said unexpectedly calmly. “I’ll apologize.”
She turned and went to the bedroom.
“Well, there,” her mother-in-law smirked. “She came to her senses.”
Five minutes later Alina came out with a bag in one hand and her car keys in the other. She was wearing her jacket.
“Where are you going?” her mother-in-law frowned.
“Out,” Alina answered shortly, heading for the door.
“What do you mean, ‘out’?!” her mother-in-law lunged after her. “You have guests!”
Alina stopped at the door and slowly turned around.
“My daughter has a performance today. And the cake I ordered two weeks ago—the one she’d been waiting for all month—you ate.”
“We’ll buy another!”
“No,” Alina shook her head. “You won’t buy anything. Because I can’t be in the same house with you anymore.”
“What, you’re abandoning us?” her mother-in-law widened her eyes. “What about dinner?”
Alina yanked the door open.
“Cook for yourselves. Or let Stepa cook—since he’s such a ‘great host’ that he can litter in someone else’s home.”
“Where do you think you’re going?!” her mother-in-law screamed. “Guests came to see you!”
Alina looked back one last time.
“To hell. Take your tickets.”
She walked out and slammed the door with all her strength.
On the landing, Alina leaned against the wall, shaking all over. Indignant shouts still came from behind the door, but she didn’t care anymore.
She took out her phone and called her mother.
“Mom,” her voice trembled. “I’m coming over.”
“What happened?” her mother asked, alarmed.
“I… I can’t stay there anymore.”
She went down the stairs, stepped outside, and drew a deep breath of cold air. For the first time in three days, she felt like she could breathe again.
Then she got in the car and drove away without looking back at the windows of her apartment.
Maksim came home at seven in the evening, rubbing the bridge of his nose, exhausted. All day he hadn’t been able to focus—his thoughts kept returning to the morning scene with Alina. He opened the door and immediately felt something was wrong.
The apartment smelled of burnt oil and something sour. In the living room, Stepa was snoring on the couch, empty beer bottles scattered on the floor. In the kitchen his mother greeted him, wearing an apron smeared with grease.
“Finally!” Lidiya Petrovna slammed a steaming frying pan onto the table. “Where have you been? We’re waiting for dinner!”
Maksim hung up his jacket slowly.
“Where’s Alina?”
“She went somewhere,” his mother waved a hand. “She was making a scene all morning, then slammed the door. Didn’t even pick up the kid from daycare—I had to go.”
A chill ran down Maksim’s spine.
“What do you mean she didn’t pick her up? She never—”
“Oh, stop it!” Aunt Galya cut in, ladling borscht into bowls. “She probably ran off to her girlfriends. Her character is… let’s just say, difficult.”
Maksim silently pulled out his phone and called Alina—temporarily unavailable. WhatsApp messages sat unread.
“What exactly happened?” he asked, forcing calm into his voice.
“Nothing!” his mother exploded. “She threw a fit over some stupid cake, called us animals, and left!”
Maksim closed his eyes. He remembered how Alina had told him about the cake for the daycare performance—how she’d chosen it all week, how excited she’d been that their daughter was waiting for it.
“You… ate the kid’s cake?” he asked quietly.
“So what?” Stepa snapped, appearing in the kitchen. “We didn’t know it was for a child.”
“You’re lying,” Maksim said sharply. “Alina definitely told you what it was for.”
An uncomfortable silence fell. Uncle Vasya poked at his food, avoiding eye contact.
“Maksim,” his mother began, but he raised a hand.
“Enough. Where’s my daughter?”
“Sleeping in the room,” Aunt Galya muttered. “I put her down.”
Maksim hurried into the child’s room. His daughter was asleep, still dressed in a dirty sweater he didn’t recognize. Cookie crumbs littered the floor, and her favorite plush bunny lay tossed in the corner.
He carefully picked her up. She stirred, whimpered, and asked sleepily, “Daddy… where’s Mom? I didn’t see her all day…”
“It’s okay, sweetheart,” he whispered, throat tightening. “Daddy will find out.”
He laid her back down, stepped into the hallway, and called his mother-in-law.
“Alena Viktorovna,” his voice shook. “Is Alina with you?”
“She’s with me,” his mother-in-law answered coldly. “And you don’t need to look for your daughter—I already went and picked her up from your… house.”
Maksim leaned against the wall.
“I… I didn’t know it was that bad—”
“Of course you didn’t know!” Alina’s sharp voice cut in from the phone. “You don’t know anything and you don’t want to! Your family destroyed the cake Nastya waited for a month! They use my things, climb into my bed, and your mother demanded I apologize to them!”
“Sweetheart, I—”
“No, Maksim. Enough. I’m not coming back while they’re there. Choose: either they leave today, or I’m filing for divorce.”
Click.
Maksim lowered the phone. Behind him stood his mother.
“So what is she babbling about?”
Maksim slowly turned. For the first time in many years he looked at his mother not as a parent, but as an adult man—at a woman destroying his family.
“Mom,” his voice was quiet, but steel trembled inside it. “You ate the cake Alina ordered for your granddaughter. You drove my wife out of the house. You—”
“Oh, don’t be a crybaby!” his mother cut him off. “A wife should obey! And that Alina of yours—”
“That’s it,” Maksim raised his hand sharply. “Tomorrow morning you all leave. I’ll buy tickets. If I need to, I’ll call a taxi to the station.”
“What?!” his mother shrieked. “You’re kicking us out because of some—”
“Because of my wife,” Maksim said firmly. “And my daughter. The two people you hurt.”
He turned and walked into the bedroom, slamming the door. For the first time in days, his mind felt clear. He took out his phone and texted Alina:
“I’m sorry. They’re leaving tomorrow morning. I understand now.”
A reply came a minute later:
“I’ll come back when they’re gone. And we’ll talk seriously.”
Maksim lay on the bed staring at the ceiling. Indignant voices rang out from behind the wall, but he didn’t care anymore. For the first time in a long time, he felt he was finally doing the right thing.
Alina stood by the entrance to her building, nervously twisting her keys in her hands. Three days had passed since she’d left. Three days at her mother’s, thinking through her future. Yesterday Maksim had texted: “They left. Come when you’re ready.”
She took a deep breath and went inside. The elevator felt чужой—foreign—as if she were returning not after three days, but after three years.
The apartment door was slightly ajar. Alina gently pushed it open and froze on the threshold.
The apartment… had changed. The air no longer smelled of tobacco and burnt oil. No чужие shoes lay scattered in the entryway. And most importantly—her favorite slippers were neatly set by the door.
“Alina?” Maksim came out of the living room. He looked exhausted, but relief showed in his eyes. “You came…”
She walked past him in silence, scanning the room. The living room was clean, but her eyes immediately caught traces of the “guests”—a stain on the couch, a scratch on the cabinet, one porcelain figurine missing.
“They really left?” she asked without turning.
“Yes. Yesterday morning.” Maksim stood in the middle of the room, not daring to come closer. “I… I bought the tickets and drove them to the station.”
Alina went into the kitchen. The fridge was almost empty—but spotless. On the table lay a note: “Alina, I bought milk and fruit for Nastya. Mom.”
She crumpled the note in her hand.
“And where is—”
“Nastya’s at daycare,” Maksim said quickly. “I thought… if you want, we can pick her up together.”
Alina turned to him slowly. For the first time in days, she really looked at her husband—rumpled shirt, shadows under his eyes, fingers clenched with nerves.
“Why did you let it happen?” she asked quietly.
Maksim lowered his head.
“I didn’t know… I thought…”
“No, you didn’t think!” her voice shook. “You saw how they behaved! How they treated me, our things, our daughter! And you did nothing!”
She turned away so he wouldn’t see the tears.
“You didn’t even protect the cake for your own child…”
Maksim stepped forward and hugged her from behind.
“I’m sorry. I was a blind idiot. But I understand now. They will never cross our threshold again.”
Alina wanted to pull away, but couldn’t. All the tension of the last days finally broke loose—she burst into sobs against his chest.
“They… they tried on my underwear… used my toothbrush…” she cried. “And your mother said I was the rude one!”
Maksim held her tighter.
“I know. I know everything. It won’t happen again.”
When she finally calmed down, he guided her to the table.
“Sit. I made you coffee.”
She looked at the foamy cup in surprise—Maksim had never been able to make good coffee.
“You learned?”
“Last night. Watched videos on YouTube,” he gave an uncertain smile. “I wanted to welcome you properly.”
Alina took a sip. It was too strong and too sweet at the same time, but it was the best coffee of her life.
“Alright,” she exhaled. “Start from the beginning. What exactly did you say to your mother?”
Maksim sat across from her and told her everything—how he yelled at his mother for the first time in his life, demanded they pack up, how Aunt Galya tried to blame everything on Alina, and how Stepa slammed the door.
“In the end,” he continued, “I said that if they try even once to interfere in our life, I’ll cut ties completely.”
Alina watched him closely.
“And what did they do?”
“Mom said I was ‘whipped.’ But they took the tickets,” he gave a bitter chuckle. “Though Uncle Vasya asked for money for a taxi to the station.”
They sat in silence, finishing their coffee. Alina felt the tension slowly loosen.
“I won’t forgive this right away,” she warned. “I need time.”
“I understand,” Maksim nodded. “I’ll wait. As long as you need.”
He reached across the table and carefully took her hand.
“I love you. And Nastya. And our home. I made a terrible mistake, but I’ll change.”
Alina didn’t answer, but she didn’t pull her hand away either.
At that moment, the phone rang—the daycare was calling to say their daughter needed to be picked up.
“Shall we go?” Maksim asked.
“We shall,” Alina nodded.
As they were leaving the apartment, she stopped suddenly.
“Maksim… what if they try to come back?”
He turned to her, and in his eyes she saw the firmness that had been missing before.
“Then I’ll remind them this isn’t their home. It’s not even mine. It’s ours. And only we set the rules here.”
For the first time in a long while, Alina felt she could breathe freely. She took her husband’s hand, and together they went to get their daughter.
A week passed after Alina returned home. Life gradually slid back into its usual track: Maksim helped more around the house, Nastya stopped asking about “Aunt Galya and Uncle Vasya,” and order finally returned to the apartment.
But one morning, as Alina sorted the mail, her hand suddenly froze. Among the bills and flyers was a thick yellow envelope—official, stamped.
She carefully tore it open and began to read. With every line her breathing quickened, and her fingers gripped the paper tighter.
“Maksim!” she called without looking up.
A minute later he appeared in the kitchen, buttoning his shirt.
“What is it?”
“This came,” Alina handed him the letter.
Maksim skimmed it, and his face darkened.
“Have they completely lost it?”
In the letter, sent in Lidiya Petrovna’s name, was an official demand to “return family valuables” supposedly left in the apartment: a dinner set, an icon, and even some “financial compensation for living expenses.”
At the bottom was a threat to go to court if the demands weren’t met within ten days.
Alina sank slowly into a chair.
“What dinner set? What icon?”
“It’s Grandma’s set that Mom once gave us as a wedding gift,” Maksim muttered. “And the icon—she really did leave it here on her last visit…”
“Gave?” Alina’s eyes flashed. “So it’s ours?”
“Well… technically, yes, but—”
“No ‘but’!” she slapped the table. “She handed it to us herself! And she brought the icon herself!”
Maksim dragged a hand through his hair.
“I know, I know… It’s just her way of pressuring us.”
“And can she actually do something through court?”
“No,” he shook his head firmly. “She doesn’t have any documents for those things. It’s empty threats.”
Alina bit her lip.
“But she won’t stop.”
“No,” Maksim admitted. “She won’t.”
They looked at each other in silence, both understanding: this was only the beginning.
An hour later Maksim went to work, and Alina was left alone with her thoughts. She picked up her phone and called her lawyer friend.
“Len, hi. I have a question…”
Her friend listened—and laughed.
“Come on, it’s a bluff. Let her sue—she’ll get laughed out of court. The main thing is to have witnesses that it was a gift.”
“Witnesses…” Alina thought. “Half the wedding hall saw it…”
“Exactly. And best of all—write a post on social media.”
“A post?”
“Yes! Upload a photo of the set, tell the story. Let people see what your mother-in-law is capable of.”
Alina hesitated. She’d never aired dirty laundry before, but now… now everything was different.
That evening, when Nastya fell asleep and Maksim watched soccer, Alina opened her laptop. She found wedding photos—there was the set on the table. There was her mother-in-law smiling and handing her the box…
She uploaded the photos and started typing:
“Once they gave me this dinner set. Now they’re demanding it back—along with ‘compensation for living expenses.’”
The text came out emotional, but without insults—just facts. She added a photo of the letter (blurring personal details) and clicked “post.”
“What are you doing?” Maksim asked, peeking into the room.
“Protecting our family,” Alina answered, closing the laptop.
She had no idea what would happen next. But for the first time in a long time, she felt she wasn’t a victim anymore.
The morning began with a phone call. Alina, not fully awake, reached for the phone on the nightstand. An unknown number was flashing on the screen.
“Hello?” she croaked.
“Well, are you happy now?!” her mother-in-law’s hysterical voice screamed into the phone. “You shamed the whole family!”
Alina sat bolt upright. Beside her, Maksim woke, blinking in confusion.
“What are you talking about?”
“Don’t play dumb! The whole internet is discussing what a terrible person I am! Relatives are calling! Even my husband’s sister from St. Petersburg wrote!”
Alina finally understood—her post had spread.
“You brought this on yourself,” she replied coldly. “When you sent that letter.”
“You… you…” her mother-in-law choked with rage. “I’ll sue you for defamation!”
Maksim grabbed the phone from his wife’s hands.
“Mom, enough.”
Silence on the other end.
“Maksim? Son, you have to—”
“No, Mom. I don’t. You crossed every boundary.”
“But she—”
“She’s my wife!” His voice cracked like a whip. “And if you threaten her again, I’ll come personally and explain why it’s better for you to disappear from our lives for good.”
He hung up. A heavy silence filled the bedroom.
Alina stared at her husband with wide eyes.
“You… you just…”
“Yes,” Maksim exhaled heavily. “And I should’ve done it a long time ago.”
They got dressed and went to the kitchen. Over breakfast, Alina’s phone wouldn’t stop buzzing—messages from friends, comments under the post, even media offers for interviews.
“Damn,” she whispered, scrolling. “I didn’t expect this kind of reaction.”
Maksim looked at her phone and whistled.
“Five thousand reposts overnight… Yeah. Mom has obviously pushed a lot of people.”
Just then the doorbell rang. Alina frowned—eight in the morning?
A courier stood outside holding a huge bouquet of roses.
“Delivery for Alina Sergeyevna?”
“That’s me…”
“Here you go. There’s a note.”
Alina opened the small envelope.
“Sorry for bothering you. My sisters and I read your story. Our mother is like that too. Stay strong.”
She couldn’t help but smile.
“What does it say?” Maksim asked.
“Flowers. From strangers.”
They exchanged a look. For the first time in weeks, something like hope appeared between them.
That evening, after they put Nastya to bed, Maksim suddenly said:
“Let’s move.”
“What?”
“Rent a new place. Sell this one. Start fresh.”
Alina looked at him, trying to tell if he was joking.
“You’re serious?”
“Absolutely. I already talked to a realtor.”
She slowly walked around the kitchen, touching familiar things—the dinner set that caused the scandal, the fridge covered with Nastya’s drawings…
“And if… if your mom—”
“She will never enter our home again,” Maksim said firmly. “Not this one, not the new one. I give you my word.”
Alina went to the window. Outside was their yard where Nastya had learned to ride a bike, the bench where she and Maksim had kissed when he came home from work…
“Okay,” she nodded. “Let’s move.”
Maksim hugged her from behind, and they stood like that, looking at their reflection in the dark glass—one small family against the world.
“I love you,” he whispered.
“I know,” Alina smiled.
The next day they called the realtor. A month later the apartment was sold. When the movers carried out the last boxes, Alina accidentally found the very icon her mother-in-law had mentioned—behind a cabinet.
“Taking it?” Maksim asked.
Alina thought for a moment, then put the icon into a box labeled “trash.”
“No.”
She took her husband’s hand, and they walked out without looking back