“And why are you still here, if you’re already divorced from my son?”
Five days after the judge officially signed our divorce papers, my former mother-in-law walked into the house in Aspen Ridge while dragging two heavy suitcases and a garment bag behind her. I heard the front door open from the second-floor study and listened to the sharp click of her wheels on the marble floor as Hudson greeted her with a relieved voice.crsaid
I did not rush downstairs to meet them, but instead I finished my coffee while the sound of the rain hit the windows overlooking the garden and the pool. When I finally entered the kitchen, Beulah was already standing by the island with an immaculate wool coat and a cup of tea in her hands.
She looked me up and down with a hard elegance that she had used to judge me during my twenty-two years of marriage to her son. Since I was barefoot and wearing a simple gray sweatshirt while looking through a blue folder of bills, she likely viewed my appearance as a personal affront to her standards.
“I asked you a question, Gwen,” she said while staring at me with that habit of being disappointed in me with impeccable politeness. “Why are you still in this house?”
The kitchen fell silent while the refrigerator hummed and I noticed Hudson standing halfway up the stairs with his hand gripping the banister. He wore the face of a man who was desperately trying to hold back a truth that was already moving much too fast for him to control.