One day, I accidentally overheard what my mother-in-law was telling her friends… and I dumped a whole bowl of salad on her.
That day was my mother-in-law’s birthday. My husband had asked me to come early to help in the kitchen so she wouldn’t get stressed before the guests arrived. Naturally, I agreed.
Around five o’clock, the first guests arrived: two elderly ladies, then three more. All unfamiliar faces. Judging by their chatter, they were my mother-in-law’s friends. She sat them down at the table right away, not waiting for the others.
“Sweetheart, bring us the meat,” I heard from the living room.
Obediently, I brought the dish, helped serve it, and was about to quietly slip away—until one of the women leaned toward my mother-in-law and whispered:
“Is that your daughter-in-law? She’s quite pretty. How long have they been married? Five years?”
I froze in place.

“Yes,” she replied curtly.
I was about to leave, but something in her tone stopped me. I remained motionless near the door, holding my breath.
“Are you really going to go through with it?” the friend asked softly.
When I realized what they were talking about, I walked back to the table, grabbed the salad bowl… and emptied it on my mother-in-law’s head.
“Yes,” I heard her say firmly. “I don’t want them to have a child…”
“A baby would change everything — you don’t want to ruin their family, do you?” the guest asked, concerned.
“He won’t come,” my mother-in-law laughed. “I’ve taken care of it.”

My heart was pounding. What did she mean? How had she “taken care” of it?
“I drop by their place when she’s not home. She takes pills to help her get pregnant faster… so I switched them out with contraceptives. Quietly. They’re in the same little plastic jar — identical shape. I take out hers, and replace them with mine…”
I felt the floor disappear beneath my feet. We had been trying to conceive for five years, without success.
“I’ve already started telling my son: without children, she’s not a real wife. In a year, he’ll be free,” my mother-in-law went on.
I struggled not to cry.
“Sweetheart, bring us the salad!” she suddenly called out from the next room.
At first, I didn’t realize she was talking to me. I picked up the salad bowl with shaking hands, my face probably paler than the wall.
When I entered the room, she exclaimed with fake concern:

“What’s wrong? You look awful!”
I walked slowly toward her… and dumped the entire bowl of salad on her head.
“I heard everything,” I said with a trembling but steady voice.
The room fell silent. Her friends gasped. I didn’t wait for a response or an apology — I simply turned and left.
Later, my husband found out everything. And despite his mother’s manipulation, I’m grateful he defended me without hesitation.