The Invoice Before the Vows
When I prepared to marry my boyfriend, his mother gifted us a brand-new house.
But to my surprise, my future sister-in-law—who'd married into the family ten years before me—just up and moved into my new home. She stood there like she owned the place and announced, "Why should you get the new house? Both our husbands are sons of this family. How can they play favorites like this?"
The truth is, when she got married, my future in-laws had given them a house of equal value too. It's just that ten years had passed, and their once-new home had simply grown old.
My future mother-in-law just wiped her tears, clearly torn, but she didn't say a word.
So I smiled and agreed to switch houses with my future sister-in-law.
But she didn't stop there. "I've taken care of Mom for ten years," she said. "I spend no less than five thousand dollars on her every year. That's fifty thousand over ten years. You two should split that cost with us—just give me twenty-five thousand."
The truth was, my future mother-in-law had spent those ten years helping them raise their kid, even draining her own pension into their household.
I turned to look at her. Still, she said nothing.
What they didn't know was that James Carter and I hadn't even filed our marriage license yet. They'd shown their true colors way too soon.
As far as I was concerned, I wasn't setting one foot into that family anymore. And I swore that I'd turn their whole house upside down.