My MIL’s Dog Barked All Night, Keeping Me Awake — She Said, “That’s Your Problem, Not His”… But She Wasn’t Laughing After My Revenge

My mother-in-law moved in for a month, and I had no idea her tiny mixed dog would bark outside my bedroom every night. I asked her to handle him, but she chuckled and said, “Sounds like your problem, not his.” Really? I decided to make it her issue then.

I imagined staying with my mother-in-law for a month while their house was fixed to be difficult, but her dog was the biggest challenge.

As much as I love dogs, Marlene’s little Rusty was one of those timid purse-sized ones who thinks staring at their owner is dangerous.

Marlene claimed Rusty was her emotional support dog despite having no documentation or true ailment.

Roland and Marlene arrived Sunday.

My husband showed them to the guest room, and I chatted about their vacation over dinner.

Rusty sneaked around my house like a small leader surveying his new territory.

He occasionally growled at anything as minor as a chair leg or a changing shadow, blaming me for my existence.

When scratching behind his ears, Marlene added, “He’s just getting used to things. Sweet boy, aren’t you? You’re a courageous little guard!”

I nodded and grinned.

After dinner, I prepared for another late hospital duty.

Marlene observed, “You really shouldn’t work such odd hours,” as I put a pack of cheese crackers in my bag.

“It comes with the job,” I said. People needing emergency surgery don’t wait until morning.”

She grumbled and dropped Rusty’s dinner.

I ignored it and went to work.

I returned hours later and Rusty growled as I went upstairs, but he ran to his bed when I gently instructed him to calm down.

Exhausted, I fell asleep with my spouse.

A noise outside my room woke me as if I hadn’t closed my eyes.

WOOF! WOOF!

I sat up straight, heart racing, as Rusty began his fury concert.

He barked wildly, shaking the walls. He occasionally let out sharp yaps that woke the street. He scratched the door like he was fleeing a fire.

I looked at my husband, who was snoring calmly—Rusty’s doomsday wasn’t bothering him.

Noise persisted for over an hour. It sounded like wolves, not a tiny lapdog.

Rusty started again, more agitated, just as I thought he was calming down.

I crept to the door and leaned against it at 2:17 a.m.

Through the wood, Marlene’s sleepy voice called, “Rusty, sweetie, come back to bed.”

Did he stop? Of course not. Her voice energized him for a dramatic finish.

Finally, thankfully, the house quieted at 3 a.m.

I nearly cried. But my alarm was set to go off in three hours, and I had to work again.

Ever tried working in a hospital on three hours of sleep? It’s like walking through a blur.

Night two? Worse.

Rusty began his normal midnight song just on time, but this time added additional tricks. He scratched at the floor and moaned between barks like he was in pain.

I swear, he hurled himself at the door like a small battering ram.

By dawn, I looked like I belonged in a zombie film. I shuffled into the kitchen where Marlene was merrily sipping coffee.

“Morning, dear! You look worn out.”

You seem worn out. Like she had no hint why.

I poured coffee and took a big breath.

“Marlene, could Rusty sleep in your room at night? “He’s been very noisy in the hall.”

With wide eyes, she blinked. “Noisy? You mean what?

The barking. All night. Right outside my door.”

Her face shifted, and I saw her shields strengthening.

Yeah, that. Maybe it’s your unusual schedule. Rusty is protective since he’s not used to late arrivals. You should appreciate his alertness.”

Grateful. Looking at her, I wondered if she was serious. Marlene, I’m grateful for much. Just not my three-hour sleep deficit.”

She chuckled. Actually laughed. Like my insomnia was funny.

“That’s your problem, not his.”

It existed. The final shove, perfectly placed on the breakfast table between her coffee and smug look.

Challenge accepted.

On the third night, as Rusty began his wild chorus, I should have done something sooner.

Sitting up, I grabbed my phone and recorded.

I recorded every bark, growl, whine, and scratch in high-quality audio.

But I continued.

After Marlene and Rusty fell asleep after their evening turmoil, I placed my Bluetooth speaker against our shared wall at 6:30 a.m.

I played.

Rusty’s greatest hits blared from high-end speakers at maximum volume.

And I? Taking my keys, I headed for coffee.

I arrived home around 9:30 to a silent house. They were arguing behind closed doors, intense, heated murmurs that made me smile as I passed.

I hardly entered the kitchen when Marlene burst in in flowery attire that evening.

“ARE YOU CRAZY?” She shouted. You actually made such horrible noise while we slept?

I put my purse down and grinned. “What awful noise? I played Rusty’s nightly show. You claimed he was protective—I thought you’d want to know.”

Her jaw fell. That’s not… absolutely different!”

“Is it?” Tilting my head, I pretended innocent. “You don’t like hearing him defend us?”

Marlene radiated red.

This is absurd. You’re unjust. Do you want us gone?

“Leave? Oh no. It seems you missed me so much you instructed Rusty to bark all night until I arrived home. I was flattered.”

Like a confused fish, she opened and closed her mouth. For once, she was silent.

“Fine,” she gritted. “Fine. We will fix it.”

First time in days, the house was quiet that night. No barking. No scratching. No dog tantrums.

The next morning, I woke up alone to sunlight and serenity.

The sound of suitcases?

I entered the guest room. The door opened.

Roland carefully packed while Marlene stuffed clothes into her bags in anger.

Already leaving? I requested.

“Plans changed,” Marlene replied. Roland’s sister asked us to stay with her. She adores Rust. And she’s nearer.”

“I see,” I said. It was great having you. Truly. It was eye-opening.”

Twenty minutes later, I waved from the driveway as they drove away.

The house was quiet after a storm for the first time in days.

Two weeks later, my sister-in-law casually stated that Marlene had enrolled Rusty in a training class.

His “nighttime nerves” bothered everyone.

Funny, huh? Rusty never misbehaved again throughout their visits.

The perfect guest, he was quiet, calm, and free of evening outbursts.

In certain cases, ensuring everyone experiences an issue is the most effective solution.

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