**The Doorbell Rang: My Mother-in-Law in Tears on the Threshold, Robbed by Her Lover**
Fifteen years ago, Vittorio and I got married. Even then, his mother made it clear that we would never be friends. I accepted that. We got married, but for a long time, God did not bless us with children. Ten years of waiting, hopes, and prayers… Finally, fate rewarded us: first, our son was born, and soon after, our daughter.
Our life was going well. Vittorio had built a successful career, becoming the director of a major company. I was able to dedicate myself to the children, take a break from work, and fully immerse myself in family life. My mother wasn’t nearby—she lived in another city—so I couldn’t expect help from her. As for my mother-in-law… In all those fifteen years, her attitude towards me never changed. To her, I was always the good-for-nothing, the crafty woman who had stolen her son. In her dreams, Vittorio was supposed to marry a “proper girl,” the one she had chosen for him. But Vittorio chose me.
We lived together, raising the children. I tried to ignore my mother-in-law’s hostility. But one day, everything fell apart.
I remember that day in great detail. The children and I had just returned from a walk. They were playing in the hallway while I went to the kitchen to prepare tea. My gaze fell on the nightstand by the door—there was a piece of paper. As I approached, I felt a shiver of anxiety. The house was empty. Vittorio’s things were gone.
On the paper, in a hasty and careless handwriting, he had written:
“I’m sorry. I’ve fallen in love with someone else. Don’t look for me. You’re strong, you’ll manage. It’s better this way for everyone.”
My husband’s phone was off. No calls, no messages. He had simply disappeared. He left me alone—with two small children in my arms.
I didn’t know where he was, nor who this “other” person was. In desperation, I called my mother-in-law. I thought she would say something, help me, explain. Instead, I heard only:
“It’s all your fault,” she said with a voice full of malice. “I knew it would end like this. You should have understood.”
At that moment, I was shocked. What had I done wrong? Why did she hate me so much? But there was no time to look for blame: I had two children to take care of, and almost no money. Vittorio had left us not a cent.
I couldn’t work—there was no one to take care of the little ones. Then I remembered that I used to earn some money writing academic articles. Thanks to this, we managed to survive. Every day was a struggle for bread. Six months went by—no news from Vittorio.
It was a rainy autumn evening. I was putting the children to bed when the doorbell rang. My heart leapt into my throat. Who could it be at this hour? Maybe the neighbors?
I opened the door slightly—and stood speechless.
There, on the threshold, stood my mother-in-law. Broken, soaked, her face streaked with tears.
“Can I come in?” she whispered, and I stepped back to let her enter.
We sat in the kitchen. While she struggled to dry her tears, she began to speak. I discovered that Vittorio’s “new flame” was nothing but a con artist. She had tricked him, taken all his money, gotten a loan in his name, and run away, taking everything of value.
Vittorio was left with nothing. The lover’s house turned out to be an illusion, the dreams a deception. My mother-in-law had also suffered: to help her son, she had mortgaged her apartment, and now the bank was threatening to evict them.
“We have nothing left,” she said in a low voice. “Please… help us… I have nowhere to go…”
She looked at me with the eyes of a beaten dog, pleading to stay, even just for a while.
I sat there, my fingers clenched. Questions buzzed in my mind. I relived all her cruel words, her contemptuous looks, those years of loneliness in her house, where I always felt like an outsider in my husband’s family. And now she was asking for shelter?
A part of me wanted to repay her in kind. To say, “Leave, you have no right to anything!” But the other part of me—the one that remembered love, kindness, and the children—didn’t let me be so cruel.
I stayed silent. My eyes burned from holding back tears.
What should I choose? Revenge or compassion?
And while I hadn’t yet decided, I stood up, made tea, and placed a cup in front of her.
Because sometimes, being human means choosing not with the heart, but with the conscience.