I left for a four-day work trip expecting to come back to a messy kitchen and a pile of emails.
Instead, I came home to a house I barely recognized.
My boyfriend, Mason Hale, and I had been living together for two years in a home I bought long before we met. It wasn’t extravagant, but it was mine. My name was on the deed, my savings paid for the renovations, and every corner of that place reflected years of hard work.
Mason contributed to utilities and groceries. It wasn’t a perfect arrangement, but it worked.
His mother, Linda, however, had always hated it.
She constantly referred to my house as “temporary,” as if it were just a waiting room before the life she imagined her son deserved.
Then I went on a work trip to Denver.
On the second day, Mason sent me a text.
“Mom’s helping with a small improvement. Don’t freak out.”
I stared at the message.
“What improvement?” I replied.
He sent a laughing emoji.
“You’ll see.”
When I walked into the house four days later, I froze.
A brand-new wall had been built straight through my living room.
My hallway had been turned into a narrow corridor. My dining room was split in half. Two doors with separate locks had been installed where there used to be open space.
It looked like someone had tried to convert my house into two apartments.
I dropped my suitcase.
“Mason… what is this?”
He shrugged casually.
“Mom had a great idea. Now we have our side, and she has her side when she stays.”
My stomach tightened.
“You built a wall in my house.”
Linda stepped out of what used to be my office, smiling proudly.
“Surprise! Two sections. Much more organized.”
I asked the only question that mattered.
“How much did this cost?”
She pulled out an envelope immediately.
“One hundred thousand dollars. Mason said you’d cover it since it’s your property.”
I laughed once.
“Why would I pay you a hundred thousand dollars?”
Her smile faltered.
“Because you’re joining this family.”
I blinked.
“Linda… I’m not married.”
She scoffed.
“You’re practically married. Same thing.”
“No,” I said slowly. “It’s not.”
Then she said something that made my blood run cold.
“You will pay because you’re Mason’s wife.”
I turned to Mason.
“Mason… what is she talking about?”
He shrugged.
“That’s just how Mom talks.”
But Linda wasn’t looking at me.
She was staring at him.
Waiting for confirmation.
I felt the truth settling in.
“Linda,” I said carefully, “why do you think I’m Mason’s wife?”
She looked confused.
“Because you got married last year. Mason told me you two went to the courthouse quietly for tax reasons.”
The room went silent.
I looked straight at Mason.
He didn’t deny it.
“Tell her the truth,” I said quietly.
Linda frowned.
“Huh?”
“We are not married,” I said slowly. “There was never a courthouse wedding. No license. No paperwork.”
Linda turned to Mason again.
Waiting.
He stayed silent.
Her face turned pale.
She realized something at the exact moment I did.
Her son had been lying to her.
For an entire year.
And the lie involved my house, my money, and a future I had never agreed to.
Then we heard a sound behind the new wall.
Footsteps.
And the click of a lock turning from the other side.