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“You seem to have forgotten this flat is mine—I bought it before we were married!” I snapped as my husband barked orders about *my* home.

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The air was thick with tension as I stood in the doorway, my voice icy. “Seems you’ve forgotten this flat is minebought before we married.” My husband had been casually dictating changes to *my* home as if it were his own.

Emily set her tea on the windowsill, staring blankly at the London skyline. Ten years of scrimpingdouble shifts, skipped holidays, every last penny saved. And now this.

“Love, I thought we could move the sofa,” her mother-in-law announced from the living room. “It blocks the chi.”

Emily exhaled sharply. Margaret had let herself inagainwith the spare key she’d copied without asking. “Just for emergencies,” she’d said.

“It stays where it is,” I said, stepping into the room. “I like it this way.”

“*Like* it?” Margaret threw up her hands. “The energy’s all wrong! I watched a programme on interior harmony just last night”

“Im not rearranging anything.”

“James!” Margaret raised her voice as her son walked in. “Tell your wife elders deserve respect!”

James hesitated, glancing between us.

“Mum, maybe not today?”

“Then *when*? Your father and I arent young anymore. Soon well need care. And youve got all this space”

Emily clenched her jaw. *There it was.* The quiet campaign shed seen coming since their wedding day. Margaret was laying the groundwork to move in.

“You have a lovely semi in Surrey,” Emily reminded her.

“*Lovely*?” Margaret scoffed. “No lift, three flights updo you know what that does to my knees? And youre right in the city, near everything”

“Later, Mum,” James cut in.

“Whats to discuss? Family sticks together. Your sister took us in straightaway”

“Charlottes husband owns their house,” Emily snapped. “*I* bought this flat. Alone.”

“Oh, here we go!” Margaret waved a dismissive hand. “Mine, yourswhat happened to sharing?”

“Emilys right,” James said, firm for once. “Its hers.”

“After all Ive sacrificed?” Margaret clutched her chest. “Is this how you repay me?”

James guided her toward the door. “Not now, Mum.”

When they were gone, Emily collapsed into the armchair. Three years of this. First “suggestions,” then “renovation ideas,” now outright demands.

“Sorry about her,” James said, sitting beside me. “She means well.”

“Does she?” Emilys laugh was hollow. “Or does she just want control?”

“Dont be dramatic”

“Dramatic? She barges in, rearranges my things, critiques *everything*and now she wants to *live* here?”

James sighed. “They *are* getting older. Shouldnt we at least consider”

Emily shot to her feet. “*Consider*? Are you *serious*?”

“I just meanteventually”

“This flat is the *one* thing Ive ever had thats truly mine. Ten years of savingdo you even *understand*?”

“*Ours* now,” James corrected softly. “Were married.”

Emily went still. *So its come to this.*

“Actually,” James continued, “I spoke to an estate agent.”

Her blood ran cold. “*What* agent?”

“Mums friend. He said if we sell this flat and my parents place”

“*Sell my flat*?”

“*Ours*,” James insisted. “We could get a countryside house. Room for everyone, fresh air”

Emily stared, disbelief choking her. Had they *planned* this?

“Do you hear yourself?” she whispered.

“Its *logical*,” James soothed, the same tone he used on his mother.

The doorbell rang. A man in a suit stood there.

“Evening. James Whitmores appointment?”

Emily flung the door open. “*Perfect* timing.”

James paled. “Wait”

She turned to the agent. “You do know *I* own this flat? Solely? Pre-marriage?”

The agent faltered. “Your husband said”

“My husband lies.” She yanked the deed from the drawer. “Look. My name. *Only* mine.”

The agent frowned. “Then no sale without your consent.”

“Which Ill *never* give.”

“You *promised*!” Margaret cried.

“*You* promised. Not me.”

As the agent left, Emily hauled Jamess suitcase from the closet.

“Youre tearing this family apart!” Margaret wailed.

“No. *You* did.”

James grabbed her wrist. “Talk to me!”

“About *what*? The loan you took out against *my* flat?”

His face drained of colour. “How?”

Her phone buzzeda bank alert. *Mortgage application pending: £200,000.*

“*What is this*?”

“Its justthe deposit for the house”

“*Forging my signature*?” Emilys voice shook.

Margaret sniffed. “Youd have said no”

“*Get out.* Both of you.”

“Youll regret this!” Margaret shrieked.

Emily slid off her ring. “Already dont.”

Outside, the winter air was bracing. For the first time in years, she breathed freely. Her phone lit upJames calling. She blocked him.

At her best friends flat, the wine flowed.

“Police?” her friend asked.

“First thing tomorrow.”

Her phone chimedMargaret: *Ungrateful girl!* James: *Ill fix this.*

Emily smirked. There was nothing *to* fix.

The bank manager was appalled. The police took notes. James begged*Dont ruin me*but Emily held firm.

“Family,” she told her friend later, “respects boundaries. Doesnt steal. Doesnt *lie*.”

Back home, she changed the locks, dumped Margarets hideous vase, and shoved the sofa right where *she* wanted it.

The court summons came the next weekJames wanted “his share.” Emily laughed. Let him try.

Another text buzzed: *Youll die alone!*

Emily deleted it.

Alone? No. *Free.*

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