When my mom passed, I lost a part of my world—but I didn’t know she’d also left behind a final move that would save me from the rest of it falling apart. My husband Peter had never been her favorite person, and though she never said it out loud, I could always sense the chill behind her polite smiles. Still, I figured that was just the usual tension between a mother-in-law and the man who swept her daughter away.
Now I know better.
Peter changed the moment my mom’s lawyer called. I was still reeling from the grief, barely sleeping, still reaching for my phone to text her, only to remember she was gone. That’s when I got the news: she’d left everything to me—her house, her savings, her retirement accounts. Over $400,000.
Peter’s reaction? At first, he was all compassion. Sweet texts. Breakfast in bed. Warm hands on my shoulder when I broke down. “She wanted you taken care of,” he’d whisper. “You deserve this.”
And then… came the wishlist.
“Let’s get you a new car,” he said one morning. “Maybe a BMW? You’ve always liked those.”
Then came the beach house. “Let’s rent something for the whole summer. Just unwind, reconnect. You can finally breathe.”
Next, a move. “This house isn’t really us, right? We could get something with a pool. A real dream home.”
The more he talked, the more I saw it: this wasn’t about grieving or healing. It was about the money.
So I said no. To the car. The vacation. The move. I told him I wanted time to think. That this money wasn’t his—it was mine, from my mother.