Living alone was no longer possible.
There was only one place left to go.
My dad’s house.
My mom had died years earlier, and Dad had remarried a woman named Veronica. She was beautiful in a way that felt almost intimidating — glossy blonde hair, flawless makeup, manicured nails, always dressed like she was about to walk into a photoshoot.
She looked like she belonged in expensive restaurants and cocktail parties, not in the quiet suburban home where my dad lived.
Still, I had no other choice.
When I arrived, my dad wrapped his arms around me like he was trying to hold the broken pieces of my life together.
“You’re home,” he said softly. “Everything’s going to be okay.”
For the first time since Ethan died, I felt like I could breathe again.
Veronica greeted me politely, but her smile was tight — the kind people give when they’re hiding their irritation.
I tried to make myself invisible in that house. I stayed mostly in the guest room, resting like the doctor ordered. I cleaned up after myself. I thanked her for every meal. I apologized for every inconvenience.
But I could feel it.
Every time she looked at me.
That quiet, simmering resentment.
My dad, though, treated me like I was still his little girl. He checked on me constantly. Some evenings he sat beside my bed telling stories about when I was a baby. Other times he showed up with small surprises — herbal tea, extra pillows for my back, even a stuffed toy he said the twins might like someday.
For a little while, I believed everything might work out.
Then my dad got sick.
It started with fatigue. A cough that wouldn’t go away. Within days we were sitting in a hospital office hearing words no family ever wants to hear.
Cancer.
And it was aggressive.
The disease moved so quickly that I barely had time to process what was happening. One day he was sitting beside me reading the newspaper. The next, I was standing beside a hospital bed watching machines go silent.
My dad died before I was ready to say goodbye.
Grief came crashing down on me again, heavier than before.
But Veronica didn’t wait long to show who she really was.
Two days after the funeral, I was standing in the kitchen trying to force down a piece of toast when she walked in.
She looked flawless — silk sleepwear, perfectly styled hair, red lipstick like she was preparing for a dinner party instead of mourning.
She poured herself a glass of wine.
Then she looked at me and said flatly,
“You should start packing.”
I stared at her.
“What?”
“You have thirty-six hours,” she said calmly. “This house is mine now. I don’t want you or your… bastards living here.”
My stomach dropped.
“I’m due in two weeks,” I whispered. “Where am I supposed to go?”
She shrugged.
“Motel. Shelter. Not my problem.”
My hands trembled as I gripped the counter.
“Dad would never allow this.”
Her smile turned cold.
“Dad isn’t here anymore,” she said quietly.
“I am.”
Then she pulled out her phone and made a call.
About an hour later, a man named Mike walked through the door. He looked around the house like he was already measuring where his furniture would go.
“Break the door if you have to,” Veronica told him, pointing toward the guest room.
“She doesn’t belong here.”
That was when fear finally gave way to panic.
I called the police.
They arrived quickly and stopped things from escalating, but I understood the truth — staying in that house with Veronica was no longer possible.
So I packed what I could and left.
That night I ended up in a women’s shelter, exhausted and terrified about what the future held.
As I dragged my suitcase across the floor, something slipped out of one of the pockets.
A large envelope.
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