They forced Mara out of the house before the rain had even dried on her husband’s grave.
Six children stood behind her in the yard, clutching plastic bags, while her father-in-law pointed toward the door as if she were nothing more than a stray.
“Your husband is gone,” Harold Vance said coldly. “This house belongs to the family.”
Mara glanced down at little Lily, asleep in her arms, her small body burning with fever. Behind Harold, Celeste stood with a thin smile and empty eyes.
“Family?” Mara asked quietly. “I gave your son six children.”
Celeste laughed. “Six burdens. Six reasons you should leave before we call the police.”
Neighbors watched from behind curtains. Harold wanted them to see. He wanted her humiliation to be public. He dragged two suitcases across the porch and tossed them into the mud.
“Those are your things.”
“My things?” Mara repeated.
“Be grateful we packed anything at all.”
Noah, her thirteen-year-old son, stepped forward. “Grandpa, please. Dad said—”
Harold struck him.
The sound echoed through the yard.
Mara moved instantly, catching her son before he fell. Her voice was low but fierce. “Don’t you ever touch my child again.”
Harold smirked. “Or what? You’ll cry?”
Celeste leaned closer. “My son married beneath him. We tolerated you because he insisted. Now he’s gone—and so is your protection.”