Food kept disappearing from Christine’s kitchen, first in small ways, then in glaringly obvious ones. A handful of chocolates went missing, then an entire box. Juice boxes drained faster than expected. At first, she brushed it off, assuming Samuel, her husband, had been indulging in midnight snacks. But the problem escalated—expensive wine bottles ended up in the recycling bin unopened by her, and premium cheeses were mysteriously half-eaten before a planned dinner party.
As frustration mounted, she started keeping a list. Monday: half a box of imported cookies vanished. Wednesday: a few pieces of dark chocolate were gone. Friday: the specialty raspberry preserves she had waited weeks for? Nowhere to be found. These weren’t random snacks—each missing item was something luxurious, something chosen with care. The final straw came when she discovered that a $200 tin of caviar, meant for Samuel’s birthday, had completely disappeared.
She knew she had to confront Samuel.
“Hey, babe,” she asked casually one morning. “Did you finish that box of Belgian truffles?”
Samuel looked up from his coffee, forehead creasing in confusion. “What truffles?”
“The ones behind the cereal,” she said.
“I didn’t even know we had truffles,” he replied.
Her stomach twisted. If Samuel hadn’t eaten them, then who had? And where had the anniversary wine gone? The expensive caviar? Her mind raced through possibilities.
“We might have a problem,” she said, her voice tight. “Unless we’ve got a really sophisticated rodent with a taste for fine dining, someone is sneaking into our house.”
Samuel put down his coffee cup, his jaw tightening. “Maybe we should set up some cameras.”
So they did.
Christine hid a small camera behind the cookbooks on the kitchen shelf, carefully angling it to capture the pantry and fridge. She set it up on her phone, waiting for an alert. Two days later, during a work meeting, her phone buzzed with a notification. She excused herself, ducking into an empty room, and pulled up the live feed.
What she saw made her blood run cold.
Expecting a maintenance worker or maybe an animal, Christine was shocked to see someone casually walking into the kitchen as if they owned the place. The person strolled to the counter, pulled out a wine glass, and poured a hefty serving from their best bottle. Then, without hesitation, they reached for the cheese drawer, pulling out an expensive wedge.
Christine’s heart pounded.
It was Pamela. Her mother-in-law.
Christine gritted her teeth as she watched the woman move around her kitchen with unsettling familiarity. Pamela didn’t hesitate—she knew exactly where everything was. This wasn’t a first-time visit.
Then, to Christine’s horror, Pamela finished her little snack and turned toward the bedroom.
Christine switched the camera feed, her hands shaking. Her jaw dropped when she saw Pamela enter her closet, rifling through her dresses. The older woman carefully slipped into Christine’s favorite dress, smoothing it down and twirling in front of the mirror.
But it didn’t stop there. Pamela went straight for the underwear drawer and began sifting through Christine’s lingerie.
Christine’s vision blurred with rage. This was beyond a simple boundary issue—this was a violation.
The next day, she took action. Calling in sick to work, she waited at home, knowing Pamela’s routine. Right on schedule, at 2 p.m., Pamela let herself in. Christine held her breath as she watched her go through the usual motions—wine, cheese, a little snack. Then, as Pamela stepped toward the bedroom, Christine made her move.
“Enjoying yourself?” she asked, stepping into the doorway.
Pamela jumped, clutching her chest. “Christine! I— I was just—”
“Just what?” Christine folded her arms. “Breaking into our house? Trying on my clothes? Stealing our food?”
Pamela flushed but quickly recovered, straightening her posture. “I was simply making sure everything was in order,” she said primly. “As Samuel’s mother, I have a responsibility—”
“A responsibility to break into our house?” Christine snapped. “Where did you get a key?”
Pamela’s expression flickered. Then she lifted her chin. “Samuel gave it to me. He said I could come by anytime.”
Christine narrowed her eyes. “That’s funny because Samuel was just as confused as I was about the missing food.”
Pamela’s mouth tightened. Before she could argue, Christine grabbed her phone and pulled up the footage. She hit play.
Pamela’s face drained of color as she watched herself on screen, sipping stolen wine and trying on Christine’s dress. She opened her mouth, but no excuse came.
“I want the key,” Christine said coldly.
Pamela crossed her arms. “I don’t have it.”
Christine didn’t flinch. “Fine. We’ll just change the locks.”
That night, she showed Samuel the footage. He stared at the screen, his expression going from confused to furious in seconds.
“I never gave her a key,” he said. “How did she get one?”
The next morning, Pamela arrived, acting as if nothing had happened. Samuel didn’t even let her inside.
“Mom,” he said firmly. “Where did you get the key?”
Pamela blinked innocently. “Oh, that? I just made a copy. For emergencies.”
“Emergencies?” Christine scoffed. “Like emergency wine tastings? Emergency dress-up parties with my wardrobe?”
Pamela sighed dramatically. “Well, maybe if you spoiled your mother-in-law the way you spoil your wife, I wouldn’t have been curious.”
Christine had enough. “You’re going to give back the key.”
Pamela smirked. “And what if I don’t?”
Samuel dropped a brand-new lock set on the counter. “Then you’ll be wasting your time trying to break into a house you can’t access anymore.”
Pamela’s face twisted with fury. Yanking a key from her purse, she slammed it on the table. “Fine! But don’t expect me to help when you need me!”
Christine smirked. “Oh, we never did.”
Pamela stormed out, slamming the door. For weeks, she sulked, bombarding Samuel with texts about how ungrateful they were. But neither of them gave in.
That same day, Christine changed the locks.
Now, every time she opened her fridge and saw all her food exactly where she left it, she smiled. Her home was finally, truly hers again.