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If You Don’t Like My Mother, Then Leave!” Declared the Husband, Never Expecting His Wife Would Do Just That

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“If you dont like my mother, then leave!” snapped the husband, not expecting his wife to take him at his word.

The evening was drawing to a close, and the flat where Emily, her husband James, and his mother Margaret lived was usually quiet. But today had been difficult from the start. Their two-year-old son, Oliver, had been fussy, Margaret had found fault with everything, and Emily felt utterly drained. She had tried her bestcooking Margarets favourite meals, keeping the flat spotless, caring for Oliver. But pleasing Margaret was impossible.

“Emily, youve folded the towels wrong again,” Margaret grumbled as she passed the bathroom. “How many times must I tell you? The corner should face in, not out!”

Or:

“Youve dressed the child all wrong, Emily! Its chilly out, and youve put him in that thin jumper! Hell catch his death!”

Emily sighed each time. She never argued, enduring it all in the hope that things would improve, that Margaret would grow used to her, to Oliver, to their life together. James, when things became unbearable, usually stayed silent. If Emily tried to complain, hed dismiss her with a shrug.

“You just need to ignore her, Emily. Mums getting on, and her nerves arent what they used to be.”

Emily had planned a surprise for their wedding anniversarya small cake, a new leather belt James had wanted for ages. She imagined a cosy evening, just the three of themOliver included, of course.

But on the day, as dinner neared completion and Oliver thankfully drifted off to sleep, Margaret launched into another outburstthis time over the soup being “too salty” (though it tasted perfectly fine).

“This is inedible!” Margaret shouted, banging her spoon against the table. “Are you trying to poison us, Emily? You cant even cook properly!”

Emily stood by the stove, gripping the ladle. The anniversary, the cake, the surpriseall of it ruined. She turned to James, who sat at the table, eyes down. She waited for him to speak up, to defend her, to put an end to this madness. But he stayed silent.

“James,” Emily said quietly. “Arent you going to say anything?”

He stood, slowly walking out into the hall. Emily followed.

“Mums right,” James muttered, still avoiding her gaze. “You never do anything properly.”

Tears welled in Emilys eyes. That was the final straw. She stared at him, but he just stared blankly at the wall.

“Do you even hear yourself?” Her voice trembled. “Its our anniversary! I I cooked, I tried! And your mother”

James turned sharply, his expression not angry, just weary and indifferent.

“If you dont like my mother, then leave.”

The words were so casual, so matter-of-fact, that Emily barely registered their weight. He said it like advice, not a verdict. Then he walked away. The meal was ruined. The celebration was ruined. Everything was ruined.

Emily sat on their bed, clutching Oliver as he slept. Her tears had dried, leaving salty trails on her cheeks. She was stunned. Hed said, “Leave.” Was he serious? This was their home. Their family. Was he really willing to throw her and their son aside so easily? She didnt pack a bag. She couldnt believe it was realit felt like a nightmare shed wake from by morning.

A day passed. Then another. James never apologised. He was cold, distant. He came home from work, ate in silence, then retreated to his study or his computer. He barely spoke to her. He played with Oliver mechanically, without his usual enthusiasm.

When Emily tried to talk to him, he brushed her off.

“Mums really upset. She says you insulted her.”

“I insulted her?” Emily couldnt believe her ears. “She screamed at me over soup!”

“It doesnt matter,” James cut in. “Its up to you now. Apologise first. Maybe then shell forgive you.”

There was no reconciliation in his tonejust an ultimatum. And Emily finally understood. This wasnt her home. She was just a guest here, tolerated as long as she played her role perfectly. The moment she slipped, she could be discarded like an old coat.

The fear shed felt at first gave way to a heavy, crushing realisation. This wasnt a family. It was a one-sided loyalty gameshe owed them everything, and they owed her nothing.

She looked down at Oliver. He didnt belong here. Neither did she. This house, this atmosphereit was destroying her. Slowly, surely. And James, her own husband, was pushing her toward the edge.

James sat in a café with his mate, Daniel. He spoke slowly, choosing his words carefully.

“Listen, mate, its this thing with Emily its not working.”

Daniel took a sip of coffee. “What now? Your mum again?”

James nodded. “Yeah. Shes getting on, you know? Nerves shot. Emilys young, she should adjust. But she wont. Always moaning, always upset.”

He was tired of the endless tensionhis mothers nagging, Emilys resentment. He just wanted peace.

“I told her straight: If you dont like my mother, leave. What else could I say? Mums family. She raised me. Shes shes all Ive got. And Emilys never happy.”

There was no regret in his voice, just frustrationand a desire to be rid of the problem. He didnt want responsibility. He wanted Emily to make the choice herself. If she walked out, his conscience would stay clean. He wouldnt have “kicked her out”shed have “chosen” to go.

“Let her decide,” he muttered, as if convincing himself. “Im sick of it. I just want a quiet life. Come home to silence. No more drama.”

He didnt see his own fault. To him, Emily was the problemshe couldnt get along with his mother. He refused to admit that his own inaction, his refusal to stand up for his wife, had driven them here. He just wanted the problem gone. And in his mind, the only way was for Emily to leave.

The next day, Emily rented a small flat nearby. She moved out quietly, without a scene. James was at work. A friend helped her shift the essentialsher things, Olivers toys, a few books. No fuss, no arguments, no tears.

When James came home, the flat felt eerily empty. He walked into the bedroomher clothes were gone. The kitchenhis half-eaten dinner sat on the table. A note lay beside it. Short, emotionless.

“You told me to leave. So I did. Hope it makes things easier for you.”

At the bottom, in smaller writing: “Olivers with me.”

James read it again and again. He couldnt believe it. Had she really gone? Hed assumed shed stay with her parents for a few days, “cool off,” then come crawling back. He waited for her call. A day. Two. Three. Nothing.

The next week, he came home to silence. No laughter, no Oliver running to greet him with a cry of “Daddy!” The flat was too quiet.

He called Emily.

“Hi. How are you?”

“Fine,” she answered, her voice flat. “Olivers asleep.”

“When when are you coming back?” His voice cracked.

“Why would I? You said it yourself: If you dont like it, leave. So I left.”

“But I didnt mean”

“I did,” she interrupted. “Its better this way. For you. For me. For Oliver.”

She hung up. James sat on the sofa, staring blankly. Hed done this. Not by accident. Not by mistake. Hed pushed her away.

Months passed. James lived alone with his mother now. The flat, which hed wanted free of “drama,” was indeed silent. Too silent.

Margarets complaints, once aimed at Emily, now fell on him.

“James, must you slouch at the table like that?”

“James, why didnt you use a coaster? Ive told you a hundred times!”

“James, must you take so long to eat? Ive already cleared up!”

Everything that had once irritated Emily was now his reality. The nagging, the petty grievances, the endless criticism. No one argued back. No one stood in his mothers way. Just silence, broken only by her voice.

He woke to it. He came home to it. Hed trapped himself. Hed wanted Emily gone for peaceand now he had it. Dead silence, and his mothers unrelenting dissatisfaction.

Sometimes, he saw Emily from afar, pushing Oliver on the swings in the park. She looked at ease. Free. No shouting, no fighting, no tension. Shed simply walked away, just as hed told her to. And shed taken everything that made his life whole with her.

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