This Morning in the Kitchen
Daria stood in the small kitchen, hands moving swiftly as she chopped vegetables, never once glancing at her mother-in-law. The air was thick, the smell of coffee and heat from the stove making every step and every word from Alla Sergeyevna, her mother-in-law, feel like it could tear the kitchen apart.
“The dust is still here, just like last year,” she said, her voice dry like the pressed leaves in a herbarium, her finger sweeping across the top shelf of the cabinet, inspecting the speck of dirt on her fingertip with a look of disdain.
Daria remained silent. Only the steady thud of the knife against the cutting board echoed. Every visit from her mother-in-law turned their kitchen into a ticking time bomb; one slip, one word, and it could explode.
Pressure on the Husband’s Shoulders
Evgeny, her husband, stepped out of the room, rubbing his tired face, forcing a weak smile. “Good morning, Mother. We just got up, haven’t had time to clean yet.”
“Morning isn’t good when the house is neglected,” Alla Sergeyevna replied sharply, her gaze fixed on the pan on the stove. “What’s this? More greens? You need meat! Strength, vitality comes from meat, not… this green stuff. Look at you, thin and pale.”
Evgeny glanced at Daria, hoping she would speak, but she only tightened her grip on the knife. “We eat what we like, Alla Sergeyevna,” she said, her voice even but firm. In the two words “we,” there was a clear boundary: a line the mother-in-law was not allowed to cross.
A Direct Confrontation
Alla Sergeyevna snapped, “Can’t you hear me, Zhenya? You’ve let her dominate you! She decides everything! This is no longer your home; it belongs to her!”
Daria put down the knife and finally turned to face her mother-in-law. No anger, no fear—just exhaustion beyond measure. “I don’t disrespect anyone, Alla Sergeyevna. I am simply preparing breakfast for my husband. If you’re unhappy with your home, the door is there.”
Alla Sergeyevna’s mouth opened in shock, yet in her mind, she felt victorious. She turned on her heel, face full of self-righteous pride, walking down the hall, adjusting her gloves and coat with every movement like a performance: I have been insulted, I am the victim.
The Confrontation Outside the Factory
A few hours later, Evgeny left the factory, the smell of asphalt and metal dust clinging to his clothes, and she was there—his mother, a cold, dark silhouette. No smile, no sign of reconciliation, only a clear objective.
“Zhenya, we need to talk,” she said, her voice both familiar and alien. Every sound around them seemed to fade in the gravity of her tone. She grabbed his sleeve as if rooting herself into him, her cold hand almost trying to transfer her anger into his body.
A Terrifying Proposal
“Daria has gone too far. This morning, she threw me out, Zhenya! She showed who really rules this house.”
Evgeny froze. Every word was a demand to turn him into a tool to undermine his wife. “Mother, what do you want? I can talk to her…”
“No! You must show her the power of a man! Teach her a lesson… so she knows who’s in charge!”
But Evgeny was no longer the obedient boy he once was. Exhaustion, resentment, and determination surged. He gently removed her hand from his sleeve, as if peeling off something filthy that had stuck for too long. “What do you want from me? For me to hurt my wife? You’ve completely lost your mind!”
A Boundary That Cannot Be Crossed
Evgeny stepped back, his fatigue and disgust giving way to resolve. He would not be a tool for arrogance and oppression. His mother could be angry, she could think she had won, but the line between love and tyranny had been drawn. He turned, walking back home to where Daria waited—where love and respect were the only law.