Really, Layla? How are they both capable of such a thing?”
I looked at her silently for a moment. It was as if this quick trip had aged my mother-in-law more than anything.
Nothing about this made sense, and I couldn’t understand how we had all been living a lie for so long.
“I don’t know when or how this happened,” I admitted to Denise, just waiting for the flight attendant to bring out the drink trolley.
“But I am telling you now,” I continued, “that this has to end.
We cannot do this anymore.
We cannot be with them. They aren’t good for us now, and they clearly won’t be good for us in the future.”
“I agree with you,” my mother-in-law admitted.
“There’s nothing left for me in my marriage. Roger didn’t care about me at all.
And Tom didn’t care about you or the boys all this time.”
“I already told him that I want a divorce,” I told her.
When we got back home, Denise packed all her belongings and moved into my home, and in turn, I packed all of Tom’s things and left them in boxes in her home.
“He and his father can decide what they want to do,” she said bitterly.
The fallout was immense.
My mother-in-law cut ties with her children, furious that they had hidden the truth from her. Strangely, our shared grief brought us closer together.
And more than that, she became a constant presence in my life, always wanting to be around me and help wherever she could, and insisting on being an active grandmother to my kids.
“I never imagined that it would all come to this,” she said one afternoon as we sat in the living room together.
“Me neither,” I replied. “But at least we know the truth now.”
What would you have done?