My name is Marta Keller, I’m thirty-three, and I teach elementary school on the outskirts of Dresden, Germany. I live in a modest brick house, nothing fancy but every corner of it was built from my own earnings. Ten years of teaching during the day, tutoring in the evenings, and finally, a bank loan co-signed by my mother, Elisabeth, gave me the keys.
When I married Leonard, I insisted his widowed mother, Greta, move in with us. Before marriage, she lived in a cramped rental near his office in Leipzig. “We have enough space,” I told myself, “and if I treat her well, we will live peacefully.” My mother warned me to be careful, but I waved her off. I thought kindness would be enough. I was wrong.
From the day Greta stepped into my house, she acted like the mistress of the place. She rearranged furniture, changed the curtains without asking, and even moved the prayer shelf to “better align with tradition.” Whenever I gently objected, she would snap:
“You may own this house, Marta, but as long as you’re the daughter-in-law, you must respect your elders.”
Leonard never intervened. His favorite line was, “She’s old—just ignore it.” So I stayed quiet, swallowing insult after insult, until one afternoon silence became impossible.
That Saturday, my mother called.
“Marta, I’ve picked apples and fresh cabbages from the farm. I’ll bring them tomorrow. And I made your son his favorite jam.”
Her voice carried warmth that always soothed me. I promised we’d share lunch together.
The next day, when I returned from school, I smelled roasted fish in the house. In the living room, Greta sat proudly with a heavily adorned guest, Mrs. Hoffmann, chairwoman of the local women’s association. They sipped tea under the chandelier, Greta in her silk blouse, her smile smug.
I greeted politely, then noticed something odd my mother wasn’t there. A cold unease pushed me toward the kitchen.
And there she was. Elisabeth, sixty-two years old, bent over the sink, sleeves rolled up, scrubbing greasy dishes. Her back looked smaller than I remembered. Sweat glistened on her temples.
“Mom! What are you doing?” I rushed to her.
She tried to smile. “It’s fine, Marta. Greta said there were guests, so I should eat here in the kitchen. I thought I’d help with the washing.”
The words struck me like a slap. My mother, who had sacrificed everything for me, who signed a loan so I could buy this house, was reduced to the maid banished to the kitchen while strangers laughed in the parlor.
I wiped her hands with a towel, my throat tight. “No, Mom. Sit down. You won’t lift another plate.”
I walked back to the living room, my heartbeat hammering. Greta and Mrs. Hoffmann looked up.
“Mrs. Hoffmann,” I said steadily, “you are welcome in my home. But I need to tell you something. My mother came to visit today. She brought vegetables for her grandson. Yet she was told to stay in the kitchen and eat separately. Do you think that is right?”
Silence. Mrs. Hoffmann shifted uncomfortably. Greta’s painted smile cracked.
“Marta, you exaggerate,” she scoffed. “Your mother arrived at the wrong time. I simply asked her to wait…”
“No.” My voice cut through the room. “You humiliated her. And I’ve tolerated enough. This house is mine, bought with my own work and my mother’s sacrifice. If you think you can rule it, you are mistaken.”
Mrs. Hoffmann stood abruptly, muttering, “I should leave. Clearly this is a family matter.” She hurried out, embarrassed.
I turned to Greta, my chest burning. “From today, you no longer get to insult the woman who raised me. You and your guest can leave.”
Her eyes widened in disbelief. “How dare you throw me out in front of outsiders?”
“Because you treated my mother worse than an outsider,” I replied.
When Leonard came home, he was furious.
“You embarrassed my mother in front of her friend? What were you thinking?”
I asked quietly, “Would you have stayed silent if my mother had told yours to eat with the maid?”
He froze. But instead of answering, he looked away choosing silence, as always.
That night I packed a small suitcase for myself, my son, and my mother. At dawn we left.
Weeks later, I repaid the last of the loan and transferred the deed of the house to my mother’s name. She deserved it more than anyone. Greta tried to twist the story to relatives, but gossip spread fast: everyone knew the truth. Her invitations to social circles dried up. Even Leonard’s career faltered; colleagues whispered about his family scandal.
Meanwhile, in my mother’s cottage outside Dresden, life blossomed quietly. My son played among apple trees, my mother hummed as she cooked, and for the first time in years, I felt peace.