CHAPTER 1

“What are you doing standing there? Go into the kitchen, the family is hungry.”
That was the first thing I heard when I finally arrived at my own house after a grueling Friday at the office.
The heavy traffic in Scottsdale had drained every ounce of my energy, and all I truly wanted was to kick off my uncomfortable heels and sink into the silence of my living room with a fresh cup of coffee.
However, the moment I stepped through the front gate, I knew instantly that something was deeply and fundamentally wrong with my sanctuary.
There were three large SUVs parked haphazardly on the lawn, the raucous sound of laughter echoed from the backyard, and the front door stood wide open as if inviting the entire world inside.
This house was my pride and joy, a gift from my parents before my upcoming wedding to Lucas, given not for status but because my mother always believed that a woman with her own roof doesn’t bow her head to anyone.
I walked into the foyer slowly, feeling like a stranger in my own home, as I scanned the living room filled with familiar faces.
Lucas’s relatives were everywhere, from uncles sharing drinks on my sofas to children sprinting down the hallway, while his mother, Beatrice, sat in my favorite armchair as though she had owned the property for decades.
Nobody bothered to greet me, nobody asked if it was alright for them to invade my space, and nobody seemed remotely concerned that the homeowner had just walked in the door.
“Go on, Felicity,” said Beatrice with an icy certainty that sent a genuine chill through my bones.
“Start heating up the tortillas and check if the rice is ready, because you certainly shouldn’t be keeping all these people waiting.”
I glanced over at Lucas, who was leaning against the wall casually scrolling through his phone, and he didn’t even bother to look up when I caught his eye.
That was the precise moment when I realized that the problem was far larger than just his intrusive relatives because it was clearly a fundamental issue with him.
It all started two weeks earlier with a simple request when Lucas asked for a copy of my house key with a disarming, soft smile.
“Give it to me, my love, just in case, since this is basically going to be our home anyway,” he had said, and I didn’t distrust him because I truly believed I loved him.
I thought sharing a key was a simple act of trust, but I didn’t realize it was actually the opening of a door that would allow him to systematically erase every single one of my personal boundaries.
I found out later that as soon as he had the spare key, he had immediately handed it over to his mother.
“It is the house I bought for when I get married,” he had told his family, refusing to acknowledge it was mine or a gift from my parents.
A lie like that, when repeated enough times in front of an audience, eventually begins to solidify into a distorted version of the truth.
I walked around the living room looking at the furniture I had carefully selected, the beautiful painting my best friend had commissioned for me, and the lamps my father had chosen with such immense care.
Everything in the house was exactly where I had placed it, yet I felt entirely out of place in my own surroundings.
A woman who was his aunt approached me with a thin, fake smile and tried to make small talk.
“Oh, look at this beautiful house that your fiancé managed to get for you,” she said, looking me up and down.
“You really hit the jackpot with this setup, honey, so you should be very grateful,” she added, and I didn’t bother answering her.
I walked straight over to sit down across from Beatrice, and a heavy silence descended upon the room for several agonizing seconds.
“Aren’t you going to the kitchen to help, Felicity?” Beatrice asked while knitting her brows in annoyance.
“First, I want to know why there are so many people in my house without me being notified in advance,” I replied firmly.
Someone from the corner of the room let out a loud, awkward giggle at my question.
“Your house?” Beatrice said with a condescending tone.
“My dear, you are almost married, so you need to stop talking like some bitter single woman because this is now a family home for all of us.”
Lucas finally decided to put his cell phone away and stepped into the conversation with a look of irritation on his face.
“Felicity, please do not start a scene right now because they just came over for a nice visit,” he said dismissively.
“And did you bother to tell them exactly whose house they were currently standing in?” I asked, looking him directly in the eyes.
“There is absolutely no point in making a huge deal out of this, so just let it go,” he replied.
I felt a slow, creeping chill in my chest that had nothing to do with the weather and everything to do with the fact that he had clearly chosen his side.
Then, I overheard a young man shouting from the hallway to his friends.
“The room upstairs is absolutely perfect for us to use every single time we come down here on the weekends,” he said loudly.
Beatrice smiled broadly, looking around my living room as if she were already planning the renovations.
“Yes, this house is simply far too big for just the two of them to have it all to themselves,” she agreed.
That was the exact moment I realized they hadn’t just come for a social visit; they had come to carve up my life and my property among themselves.
I stood up slowly, not to serve them food, but to make my way upstairs to my private bedroom to collect my thoughts.
As I began walking toward the stairs, I heard Beatrice whisper to someone nearby.
“She will quickly lose her arrogance once she realizes she is going to be living with us permanently,” she said.
I could not believe the audacity of what was unfolding before my very eyes.
CHAPTER 2
I closed my bedroom door firmly and leaned against the wood, listening to the laughter and clattering of dishes downstairs as if my personal discomfort didn’t even exist in their world.
I took a very deep breath, trying to process the fact that my own home now smelled of reheated food and someone else’s heavy perfume.
I didn’t break down into tears because I was far too angry for that, and the intensity of my frustration had turned into a cold, hard resolve.
I looked at my reflection in the mirror, seeing the same woman in a white blouse and office pants, but the light in my eyes had shifted from nervous anticipation to clarity.
I was no longer a bride-to-be worrying about wedding details; I was a woman watching her life being pillaged right in front of her.