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My Husband Invited His Ex-Wife and Kids to Spend Christmas with Us—So I Packed My Bags and Spent the Holiday at My Best Friend’s House

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You cannot be serious, Mark. Tell me youre joking, or that the taps running too loud for my ears to function.

Helen snapped off the water, wiped her hands on a tea towel, and faced her husband with a look designed to curdle milk. The kitchen was thick with the scent of boiling vegetables, freshly chopped dill, and satsumas the festive air nearly tangible. Christmas Eve was only six hours away. Ingredients for potato salad towered on the worktop, a duck with Bramley apples was roasting in the oven, and a shimmering aspicher prideset in the fridge after a sleepless night.

Mark lingered awkwardly in the doorway, fiddling with the top button of his well-loved shirta dead giveaway he knew this was madness, but was ready to brazen it out nonetheless.

Helen, please, dont start, he wheedled, looking as hopeless as a dog at bath time. Clares pipes have burst, well, not burst exactly, but theres no water. None! And no heating. Can you imagine being stranded with the kids in a freezing flat on Christmas Eve? I couldnt say no. Theyre my children. What was I supposed to do?

The kids, yes. Theyre yours, Helen replied, striving for calm while her insides staged a protest. But Clare? Is she your child too? Why isnt she off to her mothers or a friends? Or, wild notion, staying in a hotel? Frankly, those maintenance payments of yours would cover a suite at The Ritz.

Her mothers at a spa, friends are scattered, Mark muttered quickly, eyes darting anywhere but Helens face. Andwell, its the family season, isnt it? The boys would love to see their dad. Well just have dinner, watch the fireworks. Theres space for everyone.

Helen surveyed the kitchen. Yes, technically the flat was generous, but this was their havenhers and Marks. Shed laboured a week to clean every crevice, decorate the tree, match the napkins to the curtains, and splurged on that absurdly expensive aftershave Mark had been sighing over for months. Shed pictured this evening like an ad: candles, gentle fairy lights, soft music, just them. Their first Christmas at home together as a married couple, with no one else invited or interrupting. Now, the idyllic tableau was crashing down like a poorly built Jenga tower.

We had an agreement, she reminded him quietly. This would be our celebration. I dont mind your sons, you know I love having them on the weekends. But inviting your ex-wife to share our table? Do you not see how strange that is?

Youre overreacting, Mark blustered, summoning a confidence that looked more than a bit threadbare. Were all adults, Clares not a monster. Shes just the kids mum. Dont be selfish, Helen. This is Christmas. Theyll be here in an hour.

He spun and left, presumably before Helen could launch a saucepan his way. She stayed put, gripping the worktop for moral support. The duck was making merry noises in the oven, but any hint of appetite shed had had vanished. Dont be selfish. That bit stung, finding the bruised spot where all her years of bending over backwards went. Three years shed bent: tidy home, open doors for Marks boys, polite tolerance to Clares calls at all hoursfix the tap, or could Mark possibly pop to the vet for her cat? All that effort, and this was her reward.

She chopped potatoes with clinical precision, wrestling her frustration. Maybe it would be fine? Maybe Clare would behave like a normal person? Christmas miracles, reconciliationanything was possible, right?

Miracles, alas, were in short supply. The bell rang fifty minutes later. Helen barely squeezed into her dress and dabbed on some mascara before Mark, positively beaming, rushed to answer.

The invasion was immediate. Tim and Charlie, ten and seven respectively, stormed in with the force of a minor natural disaster, leaving a Hansel-and-Gretel trail of mud. And then Clare herselflike an icebreaker sailing through the Arctic, in a lurid scarlet dress threatening to plunge at the neckline, bags in hand, her perfume sweeping through the hallway like a dense pink fog, overpowering even the citrus.

At last! she shrilled, giving her fur coat a shake so the hall floor resembled an Alpine path. Absolute gridlock, I had to bully the cabbie into using shortcuts. Mark, carry thesegifts for the boys, proper champagnenone of your bargain bin bubbly, darling.

Helen plastered on a polite smile and stepped into the hallway.

Good evening, Clare. Boys, hello.

Clares gaze swept over Helen, snagging on her understated dress before she tossed out a perfunctory, Evening, Helen. Goodness, its stuffy in here. Open a window, will you? And where are my slippers, Mark? The pink ones I left last time, after I picked up the child support.

Coming, Clare, just a minute. Mark frantically rummaged through the shoe rack.

Clare, darling. She had personal slippers in this flat? And Mark knew their precise location? Helen felt something coil tightly inside.

The guests made their way in. The boys commandeered the TV and began bouncing on the brand new, pale sofa Helen had babied for weeks.

Tim, Charlie, gently please, she implored.

Oh, let them burn off energy. Theyre only children! Clare dismissed, flopping into a chair. Mark, fetch me a glass of water, Im parched.

The next hour became the Clare Show. She critiqued the tree (Such dull baubles, Helen. In my day, decorations meant fun!), the table (Are we at Buckingham Palace with this many forks?), barked at the boys, then cooed over them a moment later. Mark orbited around her, a loyal spaniel: fetching cushions, adjusting the telly, doling out chargers. He barely looked at Helen, clearly hoping to dodge any and all eye contact.

Helen kept her head down, laying the table. Plates, glassesshe could have been staff at Downton Abbey. Then Clare called out, Helen, this potato saladdid you use ham? Good lord, thats so last century. Mark likes it with beef. Surely you knew that? We always made it with beef.

Marks been devouring my potato salad for years, Helen replied from the kitchen, deliberately thumping the salad bowl on the tray.

Oh, hes just polite, Clare laughed. Poor Mark, choking it down.

Mark, eavesdropping in the doorway, gave a feeble grin and said nothing in defensethe second warning buoy on a hazardous shoreline.

The third came with the arrival of the duck. Helen carried it in, golden and glistening, a culinary triumph.

Help yourselvesduck with Bramleys and prunes.

The boys darted over, only to recoil theatrically.

Ew, its burnt! declared Charlie. I want pizza, dad.

Its caramelised, not burnt, Helen clarified, trying to smile.

Children dont eat that sort of thing, Clare chimed in, prodding a drumstick like it was a lab experiment. All that fatand prunes, who does that? Mark, order pizza for the boys. And for me, just in case. Ducks hard on my stomach.

Mark shot Helen an apologetic look.

Helen, maybe shes right? Lets get the children a treat. Ill justwont take long.

Youre joking? Helens voice wobbled. I spent four hours on that. A whole days marinating.

Oh, dont take it personally. Mark tried to squeeze her shoulder, but she shrugged away. People just like different things. Well eat bothmakes it more of a feast!

He was already scrolling through his phone, cheerily consulting Clare: Mushrooms or pepperoni, love?

Helen collapsed onto a chair. This was surreal. Her flat, her kitchen, her partyshe might as well have been a ghost at her own wake. Her husband and his ex now apparently co-managing both menu and memories.

As if on cue, Clare popped another cork and reminisced: Mark, do you remember Christmas 2015 at the lake? You dressed as Santa, then your beard fell off! I nearly wet myself laughing.

Oh, that! Mark actually chuckled. And you as the Snow Maiden, losing your heel in a snowdrift.

They plunged into shared stories: first seaside holiday, first car, the boys first steps. They laughed, reminisced, sparkly-eyedinhabiting a world where Helen had never existed. She sat at her beautifully laid table, invisible, pushed to the periphery of someone elses history.

The boys rampaged until one sent a wine glass flying. Red liquid oozed across the white tablecloth, a spreading wound.

Oh, well done! Clare said. Mark, a bit of help? Helen, you got any salt? Might not budge, but its only a cheap cloth, never mind.

Helen stood, ears ringing as the hilarity from the TV blared on. Mark was busy with salt, still following every order Clare barked, never once glancing at Helen. He seemed totally absorbed in saving Christmas for what was now, unmistakably, his previous family.

That was it. Her part: provide food, hide in the background, endure mild humiliation. No thanks.

She exited silently. Nobody noticed as she passed by the living room: Clare enthroned and monologuing, Mark guffawing dutifully.

Helen tiptoed into the bedroom. In here, it was serene, the yellow streetlights painting bars on the duvet. She pulled a gym bag from under the bed. For all her upset, Helen realised shed never been more clear-headed. Jeans, jumper, pants, make-up bag, phone charger. Passport. She slipped off the dress, threw on boots, glanced at the mirror. The reflection showed a woman tired, but icy-eyed with resolve.

Just as she stepped out, the buzzer wentthe pizza was here.

Pizza! Yes! the boys howled.

Mark, pay the man, Ive nothing smaller! Clare commanded.

Helen strolled past the living room. Mark stood with his back to her, doling out notes from his wallet to the pizza guy. As he turned, boxes in hand, she quietly slipped out the door, shut it behind her, and listened to the lock click over the general din. Only in the lift did she exhale.

Big, lazy flakes were tumbling down in the dark. The whole city was in end-of-year party mode: the odd firework, stray laughter echoing down the street. Helen rang her best friend.

Sarah? Are you up?

Are you mad? Its ten on Christmas Eve! Johns already got the fizz out. Whats happened? You sound haunted.

Ive left Mark. Can I come to yours?

Oh, lord. Of course! John, fetch another wine glass, Helens coming. Where are you? Ill book you an Uber!

Forty minutes later, Helen was in Sarahs cosy kitchen, hands clasped round a steaming mug of tea. The flat smelt of ginger and genuine comfort. John tactfully vanished to the living room, to help the TV find the Christmas channel, leaving the kitchen to the girls.

Well? Spill it, Sarah urged, pouring more tea and adding a slice of lemon. Whats that muppet done now?

Helen let it all pour out, from the dubious DIY at Clares, to the underappreciated salad, the ex-wifes endless monologues, and the duck-drama.

Its not just that they turned up, Sarah, she said, warming her hands on the cup. Its him. He justserved everyone but me. I felt like the maid while they relived the glory days. Am I supposed to compete with ghosts?

Sarah shook her head. Classic nice guy syndrome. Wants to keep everybody happy, doesnt care who he tramples doing it. If youd carried on, hed have thought its fine for you to take all the stick. Good for youhe needed a shock.

Helens phone, neglected on the table, eventually vibrated. Only after an hour did the search party apparently notice her absence.

Mark was calling. Helen ignored it.

He tried again. Still no answer.

Then the texts dribbled in:

Helen, where are you? We cant find you.

Did you nip to the shops? The pizzas going cold.

Helen, answer. This isnt funny. Clares asking where the hostess is.

Have you actually LEFT? Helen, this is childish. Come back, please! Clares getting awkward.

Helen snorted at the last. Awkward for Clare, not his own wife whod just scarpered.

Dont reply, Sarah advised. Let him stew. Let him pour the drinks and sweep up crumbs with his darling ex.

Helen switched off her phone.

That Christmas Eve, she didnt bother with wishes or making up resolutions. She just drank prosecco with Sarah and John, watched The Vicar of Dibley Christmas special, and felt a peculiar lightnessas if shed finally shrugged off a backpack weighted with three Christmases worth of resentment.

Come Christmas morning, Helen woke to golden sunlight and the scent of coffee. When she braved her phone, it displayed fifty missed calls, twenty increasingly frantic or pathetic messages.

The boys broke your favourite vase. Sorry.

Clare had a strop about the sofa, says its too firm.

Theyve gone. The flats wrecked. I dont know where to start.

Helen, darling, Im an idiot. Please, call me.

By noon, there was a ring at Sarahs door. Mark stood, looking like hed survived The Blitz. Hair wild, crumpled oxford shirt, a wine stain blooming over one pocket. He clutched a monster bouquet of roses, obviously bought at the only shop open, for a kings ransom.

Sarah blocked the hallway.

Oh, look, if it isnt Captain Christmas. What do you want?

Sarah, please, I just want to talk to Helen. I know shes here. I need to see her.

Helen came out. Oddly, she didnt feel angry, or pleased to see him so abject. Just weary.

Helen! Mark stepped forward, wilted roses shivering in his hands. Im so sorry. Soon as you went, it was chaos. Clare barked orders, the boys went feral. They destroyed the tree. Clare told me I was a useless father and Id ruined Christmas. We rowed, I sent them home in a taxi at three in the morning. You were rightabout everything. You are my family. You. I need you. Please come home. Its allwell, almostall tidy now.

Helen eyed the flowers, petals dropping onto her slippers.

Its not just that you hurt me, Mark. You put me at the bottom of the pile. You let someone else rule our home and slate me. That doesnt just vanish with an apology.

It never will happen again, I promise. Ill block Clare everywhere. Only about the children, and never in our home. No more late-night calls. Ill change, youll see.

Helen paused. She saw he meant every word, desperate, terrified even. But could she unfeel that gaping loneliness at her own table?

Im not coming back today, she said eventually. I need time. A few more days here. You go home. And think. Not about how to win me back, but how you let this happen, how her feelings matter more than mine.

Ill wait. As long as it takes. I love you, Helen. I do.

He arranged the roses on the table and retreated.

Helen went into the kitchen. Sarah was already pouring more tea.

Well? Will you forgive him? she asked.

I dont know, Sarah. Maybe. One day. Hes not a bad man, just completely muddled. If I do come back, things have to change. I wont let myself be parked like a spare chair. Not ever.

She gazed out the window at the white world, fresh and unmarreda blank page. Her story, from now on, would be written by her hand, not dictated by ghosts of Christmases past.

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З життя16 секунд ago

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З життя9 хвилин ago

My Husband’s Family Invited Themselves to Our Holiday Cottage for Christmas, But I Refused to Give Them the Keys — “So, we’ve been talking and decided: why let your cottage sit empty? We’ll head there with the kids for the Christmas holidays. Fresh air, sledging hill nearby, we’ll fire up the sauna. You’re always at work, Lena, and Vitya could use some rest—but he turns us down, says he just wants to catch up on sleep. So just hand over the keys, we’ll pop in tomorrow morning.” Svetlana, my sister-in-law, was speaking so loudly and matter-of-factly that I had to pull the phone away from my ear. I stood in the middle of the kitchen, towel-drying a plate, struggling to process what I’d just heard. My husband’s relatives’ cheek had long become a running family joke, but this was a new level of audacity. “Hold on, Svetlana,” I replied slowly, trying to keep the irritation from trembling in my voice. “What do you mean, you decided? With whom? The cottage isn’t some public holiday camp—it’s our home, mine and Vitya’s. And for your information, we were planning to go there ourselves.” “Oh, come off it!” She brushed off my protest—for all I knew, chewing something at the other end. “You were planning! Vitya told Mum you’d be home with the telly. You’ve got loads of space – two floors! We won’t be in your way, even if you decided to show up. But better not—it’s going to be a noisy crowd. Gena’s inviting mates for barbecue and music! You and your books would just be bored anyway.” I felt my face flush. I could picture it instantly: Gena, her husband, a fan of drunken singalongs; their two teenage kids who’d never heard the word “no”; and my poor cottage, into which I’d poured my soul and every penny I’d saved these last five years. “No, Svetlana,” I said firmly. “You’re not getting the keys. The cottage isn’t ready for guests, the heating system needs an expert touch, the septic tank isn’t easy. And frankly, I don’t want a crowd of strangers partying in my home.” “Strangers?!” my sister-in-law shrieked, finally pausing her chewing. “Family! Your husband’s own sister and nephew and niece! What’s happened to you and your accountant’s heart? I’ll tell Mum exactly how you welcome family!” The dial tone sounded like gunshots. I lowered the phone to the table, hands trembling in betrayal. I knew this was just the beginning. Soon the heavy artillery would arrive—my mother-in-law, Nina Petrovna, and a full-blown assault would begin. Viktor entered the kitchen a minute later, offering a guilty smile. He’d overheard, of course, but had chosen to hide in the lounge, hoping I’d handle it. “Lena, isn’t that a bit harsh?” he tip-toed in, trying to put an arm around my shoulders. “Svetka’s a bit much, sure, but they’re family. Don’t want to hurt them.” I shrugged him off and turned. The exhaustion and resolve in my eyes made him fall silent. “Vitya, do you remember last May?” I asked quietly. He winced, like a toothache had flared up. “Well, yes…” “‘Yes’?” I raised my voice. “They came for two days ‘to barbecue’. Result: your nephew broke the apple tree my father planted; the lounge carpet’s still got burn marks; a week spent scrubbing congealed, greasy dishes because Svetka said ‘I’ve got a manicure and you’ve got a dishwasher’, though they didn’t even turn it on! Smashed vase? Trampled peonies?” “Well, kids… they played…” Viktor mumbled to the lino. “Kids? He’s fifteen. She’s thirteen. Not toddlers! Those two set the sauna on fire by not opening the flue! We nearly burned down! And now you want them there alone—for a week—in winter?” “They promised to be careful… Gena said he’d keep an eye out.” “Gena will keep watch only that the vodka doesn’t run dry!” I snapped. “No, Vitya. I said no. It’s my home—legally and in fact. I put my inheritance into its renovation. I know every nail. I won’t let them turn it into a pigsty.” The rest of the evening passed in tense silence. Viktor tried putting on the telly, switched it off, went to bed. I sat in the kitchen, sipping cold tea, remembering how we built that house. It was more than a cottage—it was a dream. We’d inherited the old cabin and rebuilt it over three years, scrimping on everything. No new clothes, no seaside holidays, every penny for our sanctuary. I sanded logs myself, painted the walls, sewed the curtains, chose the fireplace tiles. To me, it was a sacred place, an escape from city stress and work. To his relatives? Just a ‘free holiday base’ with amenities. Next morning, just as I knew it would, the bell rang. I checked the spyhole and sighed heavily. On our doorstep stood Nina Petrovna, the full force of mother-in-law: fur hat, bright lipstick, huge bag poking with a frozen fish tail. “Open up, Lena! We need to talk!” she thundered, not bothering with hellos. Nina sailed in like an icebreaker, filling the hallway. Viktor poked his head out, half-relieved, half-anxious. “Mum! No warning?” he squeaked. “What, do I need an appointment now?” She snorted, dumping her coat on him. “Put the kettle on—and the valerian, my heart’s been hurting for two days over you two!” Sat in our kitchen like a tribunal chair, I poured the tea, sliced cake, braced for what was coming. “So, dear daughter-in-law,” Nina Petrovna began, “what’s up with Svetochka? Your husband’s flesh and blood. All they asked was to rest at your place. Their own flat’s a mess, can’t breathe for the dust, and your palace just sits empty. Why so stingy?” “Nina Petrovna,” I answered calmly, “it’s not a palace but a regular house that needs care. Their renovations have dragged on five years, that’s not a reason to occupy our property. And I remember their last visit perfectly. The tobacco stench still hasn’t left the guest curtains, even though I begged them not to smoke inside.” “Who cares if they smoked!” she waved her hands. “Open the windows! You care more about stuff than people, Lena, that’s materialism! We raised Vitya to be generous and kind, now you’re turning him into a miser! You can’t take the cottage to your grave!” “Mum, Lena put so much into it…” Viktor tried. “Be quiet!” she snapped. “Your wife’s got you under her thumb. Do you want your sister and nephews out in the cold? Gena turns 45 on the third—they wanted a family celebration, already bought the meat, invited friends. Now what, cancel it all? Be the laughingstock?” “That’s not my problem if they invited guests without asking,” I shot back. “That’s called bad manners, Nina Petrovna.” She turned purple—she wasn’t used to anyone arguing, especially not Viktor. But I was made of sterner stuff. “Bad manners?” she gasped theatrically, clutching her heart. “So that’s how it is? I treat you like a daughter and you… Vitya! Hear how your wife speaks to me? If you don’t hand those keys to Svetka right now, I’ll… I’ll curse that house! My foot will never cross its threshold again!” “Hardly sets foot there now, you hate weeding,” I couldn’t help but mutter. “You snake!” She jumped up, knocking over a chair. “Vitya, give me those keys! I’ll give them to Svetka. Who’s head of this family?” He glanced miserably between her and me. Torn apart. He feared his mother’s wrath, had always obeyed, but also loved me—and the cottage too. He remembered fixing the porch Gena broke, dragging a barbecue in during a storm. “Mum, Lena has the keys,” he mumbled. “And maybe we’ll go ourselves.” “A liar!” she declared. “Right, Svetka’s coming round tomorrow. Have the keys on the table—with instructions for the boiler! If not, you’re not my son. And you,” turning to me, “remember this day. What goes around comes around!” She left, slamming the door. Silence settled, broken only by the clock ticking. “You won’t give them the keys, will you?” Viktor whispered half-an-hour later. “I won’t,” I said. “In fact—Vitya, we’re going to the cottage tomorrow morning. Ourselves.” “But we hadn’t planned… you had reports…” “Plans have changed. If we don’t occupy it, they’ll lay siege. I know your sister. She’d climb in the window if she decided she ‘needed’ it. If we’re there, she’ll have to go.” “Lena, that’s war…” “It’s defending our borders, Vitya. Pack your bags.” We left at dawn. The city was sparkling under Christmas lights but our mood was anything but festive. Viktor anxiously checked his phone—on silent, as I’d requested. An hour later, we arrived. The village dozed under snowy blankets; our house, with its bright wooden walls and snow-topped roof, looked like a Christmas card. I breathed out—sanctuary. We warmed the house, switched on the underfloor heating, unpacked Christmas decorations. The smell of pine and clementines filled the air; tension began to fade. Viktor went out to shovel snow; I watched through the window as he enjoyed it. He needed this peace too, but had been afraid to admit it. The peace shattered at three in the afternoon. The blaring of car horns at the gate. I peeked out and froze—Gena’s old jeep and another unfamiliar car. A crowd tumbled out: Svetlana in bright puffer, Gena, their kids, a strange couple with a huge Rottweiler, and Nina Petrovna—a general amongst troops. Viktor hesitated by the gate, shovel in hand. “Vitya, let us in—we’re freezing!” Svetlana yelled, yanking the handle. “Lena, what’s keeping you? We came to surprise you! If you’re here—even better! Let’s celebrate together!” I put a hand on Viktor’s shoulder. He hesitated. “Hello. We weren’t expecting guests,” I said loudly. “Oh, stop pretending!” Gena waved, his voice already slurring. “Surprise! We’ve brought meat, a crate of vodka—everyone’s here. Let us in!” “A dog?” I snapped as the Rottweiler lifted its leg on my precious juniper. “Get him off my plants!” “Oh leave it, it’s just a tree!” Svetlana laughed. “Come on! Kids need the toilet!” “There’s a loo at the petrol station five miles down,” I said crisply. “I told you yesterday—the cottage is occupied. We’re resting. No room for ten guests and a dog.” A pause. They’d assumed if they just showed up, with mother-in-law in tow, we’d give in—classic family blackmail. “You’re not letting us in?” Nina Petrovna shrilled. “Leaving your own mother out in the cold? Vitya! Say something!” He turned to me, pleading. “Lena, please… they’re already here, how can we…?” “Like this,” I said firmly. “If you open that gate, in an hour it’ll be drunken chaos. The dog’ll dig up my garden and foul the carpets, the kids will destroy the upstairs, your sister will teach me how to cook in my own kitchen, and your brother-in-law will smoke cigars in the lounge. Our peaceful holiday—ruined. Is that what you want? Or would you prefer a quiet New Year with me? Make your choice. Right now.” Behind the gate, Gena was kicking his tyre, Svetlana was screaming insults, the kids were throwing snowballs at the window, Nina Petrovna clutched her heart theatrically. And suddenly, Viktor remembered. Three days fixing the swing last visit, the shame over the burnt rug, wishing simply to nap by the fire instead of running out for Gena’s vodka. He straightened, stepped to the gate, and, quietly but very firmly, declared: “Mum, Svetka. Lena’s right. We said there’d be no keys and no guests. Please leave.” “What?!” the whole clan roared. “You heard me. This is my home too. No circus. Please go.” “You—you—” Gena started, hand trying to force the latch. “Go, Gena,” Viktor gripped his shovel. “I’ll call security.” “Security?!” Nina Petrovna wheezed. “We’re family! I curse you, Judas! And your snake wife! I’ll never set foot here again!” “Let’s go!” Svetlana yanked her husband. “They’re mad! Let’s go to Tolyan’s place—he may be half-built but at least they’re welcoming!” Finally, engines revved, wheels spun, cars reversed out through the snow. Svetlana showed me a very rude gesture, Nina Petrovna’s stare like granite. Five minutes later, only silence—and a yellowed patch on my winter-wrapped juniper for proof. Viktor rammed the shovel into a snowdrift, sat heavily on the steps, face in hands. “Oh God, what a disgrace,” he whispered. “My own mother…” I sat beside him, put my arms around him, rested my cheek to his shoulder. “It’s not disgrace, Vitya. It’s growing up. Today you protected our family—the two of us. Not their clan, but us.” “She’ll never forgive me.” “She will. The moment she needs something—money for medicine or help with a job. They’re like that. They don’t stay upset if it’s inconvenient. But now they’ll know—there’s a line. And start respecting you. Not right away, but they will.” “You think?” “I know. And if not… well, we’ll have more peace. Come in, or you’ll freeze. I’ll make us mulled wine.” We went inside, drawn the curtains, shutting out the cold and angry words. In the evening, by the fire, we watched the flames in a silence that was cosy, not bitter. The next three days passed in blissful quiet. Woodland walks, barbecues—for ourselves—sauna, books. The phones silent—the family had declared boycott. On the third of January, just as I’d predicted, Viktor’s phone pinged: a message from Svetlana. Not an apology—just a photo: some sort of shed, a battered gas stove, empty vodka bottles and blurry, drunken faces. Caption: “Having a great holiday without you. Jealous much?” I looked at the battered table, Gena’s puffy face, and then at my husband asleep with a book, relaxed, peaceful, content. “Nothing to be jealous of, Svetka,” I whispered, deleting the message so as not to wake him. A week later, back in the city, Nina Petrovna rang herself. Her voice was cold and hurt, but she needed Viktor to drive her to the clinic. She didn’t mention the cottage. The boundary was drawn. There’d be the odd skirmish, but our citadel stood firm. Sometimes you need to be ‘bad’ for others to be good for yourself, and to protect your own family. And from then on, the cottage keys sat not on the hallway shelf, but locked in my safe. Just in case.

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