When Sasha’s newly divorced sister-in-law moves in, she expects healing, not mimicry. But as Abby begins to dress like her, speak like her, and slip deeper into her family’s rhythm, Sasha realizes that she’s not hosting a guest, she’s housing a woman who’s trying to reclaim a life that was never hers.
She arrived with three suitcases, a bottle of red wine, and a hollowed-out smile.
Abby, my sister-in-law, was freshly divorced. My husband, Michael, didn’t even blink before inviting her to stay.
“Just for a little while,” he said, already pulling out the air mattress. “She needs somewhere to land, Sasha. I don’t know what she’s been going through…”
“Fine,” I agreed. “The air mattress will have to do for now. I’ll clear out the guest room tomorrow. I’ll change the bedding and all of that.”
“Thank you, love,” Michael said. “I don’t know what else to do. I don’t know how else to help her. She’s… my responsibility since our father died.”
“I know,” I replied. “I get it. We need to tell the girls that Abby is coming.”
I cleared out the guest room. I fluffed pillows. Dusted the curtains. Picked up all the toys the kids had thrown around the room. I set a vase of flowers on the windowsill.
And all the while I pretended like I didn’t feel the walls tightening.
What I didn’t know was that I was about to be replaced in my own life.
The first week was fine. I worked from home, so it was easy to escape into my home office while Abby did her own thing. She had taken a break from work, too.
“May as well use my vacation days, huh?” she laughed, pouring a glass of wine for herself.
She played board games with Lily. Sketched and colored fairies with Ella. Abby even cooked a few meals. She complimented my leggings and my dreamcatcher tattoo. She asked for skincare tips.
I watched her float around the house like a ghost with good intentions.
I told myself that I was being too sensitive. That Abby was just getting comfortable, and honestly? It wasn’t so bad. This was her brother’s home, it was her nieces’ home. Maybe she really did need it.
But then I walked into the kitchen one morning and she was wearing my robe.
“It was just hanging in the laundry room,” she said, smiling. “I didn’t think you’d mind, Sasha.”
That was the first flicker of something darker. Something that I couldn’t pinpoint. Something that I couldn’t name.
After a little while, Abby started watching me. Not just passively but actually studying me.
My routines. My tone of voice. The way I packed the girls’ lunches and set out their clothes.
She’d mirror me, a beat too late, but still almost the same. It was like she was trying on a new personality to see how it fit.
Then came the lasagne. My recipe, of course, right down to the basil from the garden. Only hers was better. My husband raved about it, joking that I’d been officially replaced as the house cook.
I laughed tightly. That night, she tucked the girls into bed and read them my favorite story. They didn’t ask for me once.
I stood in the hallway, feeling like a guest in my own home.
And do you know what? It got even stranger.
Abby joined my yoga studio and bought the same leggings I wore to the class. She bought my exact perfume. She ordered the same phone case. Sometimes I’d catch her standing in the hallway mirror, adjusting her hair to look just like mine.
It would’ve been laughable if it didn’t feel like a slow erasure.
“Stop it, Sasha,” I told myself in the mirror one day. “She needs the help. She needs family. You’re irreplaceable here. This is your home.”
But if those affirmations were true… then why did I feel a constant pit of dread in my stomach?
Then, one night, Ella called Abby “Mom” by mistake.
“Sorry, Mommy,” she grinned, putting her hand over her mouth. “It slipped out.”
I smiled at my daughter and gave her another piece of garlic bread.
“That’s cute,” Michael chuckled. “But aunts are like second moms, aren’t they? Dad would be proud of how you’re handling… everything, Abs.”
She beamed at her brother from across the table, adding more asparagus to her plate.
“Thanks, Michael,” she said. “It’s been really difficult, but I’m grateful that I have you and Sasha and the girls to keep me going. I appreciate you all.”
I didn’t speak for the rest of dinner.
Week two rolled around and I tried to speak to my husband about my thoughts, my feelings, and my insecurities which were running wild in my head.
“She’s admiring you, love,” he said, sipping his beer. “Come on, Sash, she’s just trying to rebuild her life. I highly doubt she knows who she is without Jared. Let her borrow a little confidence from you. Maybe it will help her cope.”
“She’s not borrowing it, Michael,” I snapped. “She’s becoming me! Or trying to anyway.”