My MIL Left the House Every

They say you never really know someone until you’ve lived with them. I thought I knew my mother-in-law,but everything changed when I decided to follow her. What I uncovered wasn’t just a secret;it was a ticking time bomb that threatened the peace of our home.

I used to think my life was predictable, with its comforting routine.

I worked as a freelance graphic designer, which gave me the flexibility to be home most days while still bringing in a decent income.

Xander, my husband, worked long hours at his law firm, so I often had the house to myself.

It was peaceful until my mother-in-law, Cordelia, moved in three months ago.After her husband passed away,

she called us one night, her voice trembling.

“Olive, dear… I don’t know how to do this on my own,” she’d sobbed over the phone.

“The house is so empty, so lonely… I just need to be around my family.”

I glanced at Xander, and he nodded, looking concerned. We agreed to let Cordelia move in;

it felt like the right thing to do for a grieving woman who’d just lost her partner of 40 years.

But from the start, something felt off.Cordelia had always been a little strange,

but now her behavior was unpredictable. Every Thursday, she would leave early in the morning and

return late in the evening, her clothes carrying a terrible stench: something rotten and damp,

like decay. It lingered, clinging to the air and making me question what she was really up to.

“Mom, where were you today?” Xander asked her one Thursday evening as she shuffled into the kitchen,

her eyes avoiding ours. I stood by the stove, pretending to stir a pot of soup, trying not to wrinkle my nose at the smell.

“Oh, just out with some old friends,” she said, waving a hand dismissively, her smile tight and unconvincing.

“Every Thursday?” I asked, keeping my tone casual. “That must be some social circle.”

She glanced at me, her eyes lingering a moment too long, then shrugged. “We like to meet regularly.

It’s good for the soul, you know, catching up with old friends.”

But that smell — it was like she’d been crawling through a sewer. The scent lingered long after she’d passed,

a pungent blend of garbage and something wet and decayed. I could feel my curiosity gnawing at me,

the way you can’t help but poke at a sore tooth.

One Wednesday night, I couldn’t take it anymore. “Xander,” I whispered, nudging him awake.

“Are you seriously buying that story?”

He blinked sleepily. “What story?”

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