My mother-in-law treated me like a ‘gold-digging maid’ for five years, making me scrub her floors while she bragged about her son’s high-paying job. At the company’s Easter gala, she tried to have me kicked out by security. The security guard looked at her, then bowed to me. ‘Welcome back, ma’am.’ I turned to my mother-in-law and said, ‘You’re right—your son does have a great job. And as his CEO, I’m firing him.’

My Mother-in-Law Called Me a “Gold-Digging Maid” for Years—Until She Tried to Get Me Removed at the Company Gala

“My son built this empire,” Beatrice Sterling snapped, her tone sharp enough to leave a mark. “And you? You’re just the help.”

She stood in the foyer like she owned the air—perfect hair, expensive robe, espresso in hand—while I knelt on cold marble with a bucket of murky water at my side. To Beatrice, I wasn’t family. I was the “small-town wife” her son brought home, someone she could order around and insult whenever she felt like it.

For five years, she treated me like a live-in housekeeper. Scrub the floors. Polish the silver. Stay quiet. Smile. And if I ever showed an ounce of pride, she’d remind me that her son had a “high-paying executive job” and I should be grateful I got to stand near his success.

That was her favorite line—especially when guests came over.

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