Mara looked at the house—the white columns, the iron gates, the place where she had raised her children and watched her husband slowly fade away.
She could have screamed.
Instead, she picked up the muddy suitcases.
“Children,” she said softly. “We’re leaving.”
“Good,” Harold replied. “And don’t come back.”
Mara walked away with her six children trailing behind her like a wounded army. Only when she reached the street did she turn back. Harold was already laughing. Celeste was on the phone, likely sharing her victory.
Mara allowed herself the smallest smile.
Not from happiness—
but from memory.
Three months before his death, her husband Richard had pressed a folder into her hands.
“If they ever try to erase you,” he whispered, “take this to attorney Bell.”
That night, in a cheap motel room, while her children slept and Noah’s bruised cheek darkened under the lamp, Mara finally opened it.
And everything changed.