My husband demanded I give my summer house to his mother – but I came up with a brilliant plan and got my revenge

My husband demanded I hand over my summer house to his mother. The summer house I built from scratch, into which I had poured all my money and time.

– Mom deserves better – he said, as if he were talking about getting rid of an old piece of furniture. – You can buy yourself something else… someday.

I had to agree, but I devised a brilliant plan to take revenge on my greedy mother-in-law, for whom a spacious apartment wasn’t enough.

I tell what I did in the comments 👇👇

Spring, my summer house. I was sitting with my knees pulled to my chest, wrapped in a woolen shawl, gazing out at the garden I had nurtured for years. This house was built with almost my bare hands.

And now, it was no longer mine.

– Mom deserves better – my husband repeated, as though discussing an item of no value. – You’ll buy another one… someday.

“Someday.” Just like that.

He spoke on behalf of his mother – a woman who always looked at me with a slight squint, as if I weren’t good enough for her son.

She wanted the summer house. The spacious apartment wasn’t enough.

That night, I couldn’t sleep. I sat in a chair by the fireplace, thoughts racing. And then… something clicked. I knew I needed a plan for revenge.

By dawn, the plan was ready. In one morning, I transformed the garden beyond recognition. I moved the flower beds, hid the tools, and where there once was a cozy tea nook, I placed a rusty bathtub filled with reeds.

The whole place looked abandoned, as if no one had lived there for years.

Then I tackled the house. I took down the curtains, hid the cushions, put away the dishes, and draped gray sheets over the furniture. The home instantly felt cold and lifeless.

When my mother-in-law arrived to “inspect her new property,” she froze at the gate.

– This… this isn’t what you described – she whispered to my husband.

I just shrugged: – Everything’s fair. The house is as-is. You can live in it or sell it. But from now on, you do everything yourself.

And I left. Not in tears, not in anger.

A few months later, I opened a small tea shop in the city.

My mother-in-law didn’t stay long at the summer house. Word is, she put it up for sale. But no one wants to buy it.

And I don’t miss it anymore. Because sometimes, to keep what’s truly yours, you have to be willing to let go.

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