Angela had braced herself for a week of polite silences and awkward dinners. When her husband, Malcolm, left for New York, she told herself she could handle living under the same roof as her grieving mother-in-law.
Cynthia had moved in with four suitcases, a box of framed photographs, and a quiet so heavy it made the house feel like a hospital waiting room. She said she couldn’t bear the emptiness of her own home since Frank died—couldn’t stand the echo of her own footsteps in the morning. Angela hadn’t wanted her there, but Malcolm had asked, almost pleaded.
“Two or three months, tops,” he’d promised, rubbing the back of his neck. “Let’s give her a reason to move forward.”
Angela had agreed. She told herself it was temporary. She told herself she could make space.
The first weeks were filled with small irritations Angela swallowed whole: damp towels left hanging over the bathroom door, shampoo bottles uncapped, and the faint scent of apple-lavender shampoo drifting down the hallway after Cynthia’s marathon showers. They were things Angela noticed but didn’t confront.
She didn’t expect the real battle would come over the bathroom.
The day Malcolm left for his trip, Angela came home with the kids and found Cynthia blocking the doorway between the hall and living room, standing like a guard.
“Before you all get settled,” she announced, “no one is to go into the bathroom with the tub. Not for the next week.”
Angela blinked. “I’m sorry… what?”
“It’s for your safety,” Cynthia said, in a tone that dared questions.
Angela tried logic. “We have one working shower, Cynthia. The one in my bathroom is broken.”
“You can use mine,” Cynthia replied sweetly. “The water pressure’s wonderful.”
But Cynthia’s house was across town. The suggestion was absurd. And she wouldn’t say why the bathroom was off-limits. She just pulled the couch so it faced the bathroom door, set up pillows, and camped there like a sentry.
That night, Angela washed her hair in the kitchen sink and told the kids they were “camping.” Cynthia watched them with a flat expression, as if daring Angela to break the rule.
By the second night, Angela’s patience was gone. Once the house was silent and Cynthia’s snores were steady, she crept into the hallway with the bathroom key.
The smell hit first: earthy, musky, almost reptilian. The tile was cold under her socks. Something shifted behind the shower curtain—weighty, deliberate.
She pulled it back.
The shapes coiled and uncoiled, thick as her wrist, patterned in diamonds. Four snakes by her count.
Rattlesnakes. In her bathtub.
Her scream brought Cynthia running. “I told you not to come in here!” she shouted.
“What the hell are these doing in my bathroom?”
“They’re timber rattlesnakes,” Cynthia said matter-of-factly. “Injured. I rescued them. The bathroom is warm and quiet—perfect for recovery.”
Angela stared. “Venomous snakes. In the tub. Where my kids brush their teeth.”
“They’re only slightly venomous,” Cynthia countered. “Their rattles are damaged. They can’t hurt anyone.”
Angela called Malcolm on speaker. His voice was flat. “Tell my mother to get them out. Tonight.”
Cynthia’s shoulders sagged. Without another word, she fetched plastic bins, lined them with damp towels, and coaxed each snake inside with careful hands. She carried them to her car, one by one, and drove off into the night.
Angela scrubbed the bathroom until her arms ached, the smell of vinegar and lemon cleaner replacing the musk. She thought about grief—how it makes people reach for the first warm thing that doesn’t pull away.
Cynthia texted the next day: a photo of a terrarium glowing under a heat lamp. “They seem much calmer now.”
Angela replied simply: “That looks safer.”
She didn’t know if she’d ever fully trust her mother-in-law again. But she knew one thing for certain—if Cynthia ever moved back in, the bathroom door would stay firmly in Angela’s control.