З життя
Very well, you may stay for the holidays—but prepare three bedrooms for my sisters and niece. You’ll sleep in the kitchen tonight.

**Diary Entry 3rd January**
Bloody hell, what a way to start the new year. Never thought my exs family would stoop this low.
It all began before Christmas. My old mate Emma invited me over for New Years Eveher place was always lively, with her daughter, son-in-law, grandkids, and sister all gathering. I was looking forward to it, especially since my own daughter, Sophie, decided to stay at uni for the holiday. No matterId make the best of it.
I was heading to the shops to pick up gifts when Rita, my ex-husband Michaels sister, ambushed me in the car park.
“Val, there you are! Been freezing my arse off waiting for you,” she said, as if we were still family.
“Afternoon, Rita. Didnt expect to see you here.”
She scoffed. “Were still relatives, arent we? Twenty years has to count for something.”
“Not anymore,” I said, reaching for the car door.
She blocked me. “Listen, Mums askedno, the *familys* askedif we can use your house for New Years Eve. Like old times.”
I nearly laughed. “What family? Michael and I divorced a year ago. That house is *mine*legally. If your lot show up uninvited, Ill have the police drag you out.”
Rita huffed about tradition, how they’d always celebrated there, but I cut her off. “Book a hotel.”
Drove home fuming.
Michael and I had been married nearly twenty years. Bought that house in Kent a decade ago. Then last year, the prick decided life “wasnt over at forty-five” and ran off with his secretary. Fine. I kept the house, savings, and dignity. He got the flat, his precious Lexus, and the garage.
That evening, his mother, Margaret, rang. “Valentine, youve got some nerve! Thats *Michaels* house, and we *will* be celebrating there!”
“Over my dead body,” I said.
She sneered. “Be a dear and prep three bedrooms. My sisters and niece are staying. You can sleep in the kitchen.”
“Margaret, love, are you forgetting I own this house? Try breaking in, and youll meet the police.”
She hung up, but I knew they wouldnt back down.
Sure enough, on New Years Eve, four cars pulled up. No lights onI wasnt home. Margaret had a key (of course she did), and they let themselves in.
Meanwhile, I was at Emmas, setting the table when my phone rang. Burglar alarm triggered. Police were at my house.
Twelve peopleall Michaels familyclaimed they had permission. I laughed. “They dont.”
By the time they were released from the station, the food theyd brought had spoiled. Michael rang later, livid. “You *knew* Mum had a key! You set them up!”
“I *protected* my property. They chose to trespass.”
A satisfying end, really. They wanted a fight; they got one.
**Lesson learnt:** Never underestimate the audacity of entitled in-lawsbut always outmanoeuvre them.
