So that’s why you took the news about selling the house so calmly!” — my mother-in-law trembled with rage, having found my grandmother’s will among my documents.

“Mom, wait! I told you not to touch my documents!” Marina burst into the office, but it was already too late. Galina Petrovna stood by the open safe with a folder in her hands, her face frozen in shock. Clutched in her trembling fingers was a document sealed by a notary—the will of Marina’s late … Read more

You must stay silent, pauper,” hissed my mother-in-law just before the guests arrived, but she froze when the main guest hugged me and called me his daughter

— Napkins. Rearrange them. The voice of my mother-in-law, Tamara Igorevna, cut through my nerves like a dull knife on glass. I froze, staring at the perfectly even stack of linen napkins. — What’s wrong with them? — my voice sounded too quiet, almost inaudible. — The corner. It’s raised by a millimeter. The guests … Read more

— If you’re planning to go to your mother’s for three months, maybe it’s better if we just get a divorce? Because I’m tired of you mostly being…

— I’ve decided—I’m going to my mom’s on Saturday. Probably for about three months. The words fell on the table between the plate of fried potatoes and the salad. They fell lightly, mundanely, like breadcrumbs. Artyom said them without breaking from his food, carefully spearing a browned piece of chicken on his fork. To him, … Read more

— I blocked the account, — the wife said coldly. — The car is mine. The apartment too. Now go ask your mommy.

— Where were you wandering until eleven, huh? — Maxim’s voice came from the bathroom. He slipped through the morning like a drop of ketchup on a white shirt: not a catastrophe, but it spoiled the mood. Elena, already fully ready to go, keys in hand and a serious face, froze at the kitchen doorway. … Read more

I bought the house alone — and we will live here. Without your mother, your sister-in-law, and your niece,” Yana said and closed the door.

Yana stood in the middle of the empty apartment where her grandmother’s furniture had still been yesterday, feeling a strange mix of sadness and excitement. The sale agreement lay on the windowsill, and the new buyers would pick up the keys tomorrow. One and a half million rubles. Not much by Moscow standards, but enough … Read more

He offered to paint the fence on the grave… A week later, he showed up at his house with a bag of money — the man was stunned when he learned the truth

— Want me to paint the fence and keep an eye on things? I’ll charge you a low price, but at least you’ll be calm—someone will be watching the place. Alexander looked up and saw a young boy, about fifteen, wearing a quilted jacket clearly not his size but still sturdy, and a black hat … Read more

At his wife’s funeral, an unfamiliar girl shouted at the husband: “Check the footage from the maternity ward cameras!”

Night, thickening over the city, seemed to anticipate a tragedy. Heavy clouds crawled across the sky, as if bearing the weight of unfulfilled hopes and broken fates. The car slid over the wet asphalt like a ghost, leaving behind a trail of headlights and silence pierced by anxiety. Roman sat behind the wheel, gripping it … Read more

— You bought the car, Svetlana, no one disputes that. But you’re married. And in marriage, sorry, everything is shared. Even if you need it more than Vera needs it for the photo zone.

The morning after filing for divorce isn’t coffee with a croissant, but a call from the housing office reminding you about unpaid major repairs. Svetlana got up not because she slept well, but because there was an empty spot on the pillow beside her. Andrey had gone to his mother’s — predictable, like a “Phlebodia” … Read more

Drink, dear, this tea will help you fall asleep,” whispered my husband, and I just pretended to drink it, because my husband was not who he claimed to be.

Mark moved the pot with the wilting azalea off the windowsill, making room for something new. He moved with that smooth, focused grace that had first drawn me to him. But now every one of his movements stirred a dull, inexplicable anxiety in me. “Why did you move it?” My voice sounded weaker than I … Read more