The next morning, I stocked the fridge to the brim. Fresh berries. Grass-fed steaks. Imported cheese. Everything Oliver loved.
Then I waited.
At 6:07 a.m., I heard it: the faint squeak of the fridge door. I stayed in bed, holding my breath.
Rustling plastic. The slow scrape of jars against shelves.
And then… silence. Followed by the garage door opening.
My pulse raced. This was it.
I slipped out of bed, barefoot, and crept into the kitchen.
Half the groceries were gone. Not old leftovers — not anything close to spoiling. No. He had taken the good stuff.
And there, on the counter, sat a list. A neat grocery list written in perfect cursive. Not Oliver’s handwriting.
My stomach dropped. I knew that handwriting.
Carol.
My mother-in-law.
I threw on a coat, grabbed my keys, and tailed Oliver’s car down the quiet morning streets.
Fifteen minutes later, he pulled into a driveway I knew too well. Carol’s.
I parked a block away, heart hammering, and watched.
Oliver unloaded the bags like a delivery boy. Carol appeared in her robe, plucked the groceries from his arms, and kissed him on the cheek.
That was it. The final snap.
I slammed my car door so hard they both jumped.
“Well, well,” I said. “So THIS is the shelter you’ve been feeding?”
Oliver stammered, pale. Carol crossed her arms, smug.
“I raised a son who knows how to care for his mother,” she sneered. “You should be grateful.”
“You raised a son who raids his wife’s fridge to play grocery fairy for Mommy,” I shot back.
Carol smiled, syrupy-sweet. “You married into this family. That means you share.”
I laughed, sharp and bitter. “Oh, I’ve shared plenty. But you’re about to learn what sharing really feels like.”