Chapter 1
I used to be a mafia princess. Now? I’m just the help. I gave up my empire for love. Walked away from the Rossini name, the gold, the power—all for one promise Edmund made me on my eighteenth birthday.
“One day, baby, I’ll take you around the world.”
Thirty years later, I’m invisible in my own home. Mocked by my grandsons. Ignored by my son. And replaced—body and soul—by my perfect, venomous sister-in-law, Elizabeth.
I knew. Everyone knew. Elizabeth was Edmund’s mistress. But I kept my mouth shut. I believed—foolishly—that Edmund would change.
Then came my forty-eighth birthday.
I dared to ask Edmund for one thing—a cruise. Just a simple cruise.
He brushed me off like I was nothing.
But the truth hit me like a bullet.
I found their cruise tickets. Edmund and Elizabeth, sailing away with my son, my daughter-in-law, and my grandsons—all celebrating Elizabeth’s birthday.
I was left behind by all of them.
I smiled, bitter and cold. Grabbed my suitcase. Booked the next flight back to my real home.
Back to the dangerous daughter of a mafia king—the one Edmund always feared and the alliance he’s been desperate to control.
That was the moment I found my voice—clear. Calm. Sharper than a blade.
“The divorce papers are waiting for you.”
There was a stunned pause, then Edmund’s voice cracked through the line, “You’re joking. You can’t divorce me.”
I laughed. Cold. Cruel. Cutting through the silence like a knife.
“I can.”
--
I was supposed to be the ghost in the house.
I never asked for jewels. Never asked for roses. Just one promise. One promise.
A cruise.
Edmund had said it back when he still had a soul. “One day, when we're rich,” he whispered into my hair, “I'll take you around the world, baby. Just us.”
That was before the money. Before the empire. Before I became his wife in name, and his maid in practice.
And today’s my 48th birthday. No one ever greeted me. No cake, no candles.
And I thought maybe—just maybe—it could be mine.
I brought it up after dinner. He was still in his chair, polishing his pistol with that same old cloth like it was a sacred ritual. The flatscreen TV was playing some old Western no one was watching. My heart was pounding harder than it should’ve been.
“Do you remember what you told me… on my 18th birthday?” I asked quietly.
He didn’t look up. “Which part?”
“That we’d travel. See the world together. You said once the business settled and our boy was grown… we’d go. On a cruise. Just us.”
“Are you out of your mind?” Edmund chuckled, “You think you deserve a cruise? Look at you. You look like a bamboo stick. One gust and you're gone. You think the captain’s gonna see you and roll out a red carpet? No, Doris. He’s gonna think you’re hauling walking bacteria on board.”
"But today is—"
"Today's what?" He finally looked at me. His face was older, heavier now. “You’re not young anymore. The world’s not kind to women like you out there. You're not like Elizabeth.”
There it was. The name that always hovered between us.
Elizabeth. My sister-in-law. His brother’s widow. Slim, golden-haired, always dressed like she stepped out of a fashion magazine. She judged me with her eyes every time we were in the same room. Edmund never corrected her.
“She’s younger,” he continued, “travels for business. Makes appearances for the family. She’s part of the image. But you—you’ve always been the one behind the scenes. That’s where you shine. The house. The family. You keep things running.”
Behind me, the twins were laughing. My grandson.
“Yeah, Ma, you look like a skeleton in a funeral dress,” said Lyle, smirking.
“Smells like old mop water and something foul,” Nash added, pinching his nose.
They burst into snorting laughter. No one stopped them. No one ever did.
Lester, our pride and failure, leaned against the fridge and shouted across the kitchen, “Hey, Ma. Wash my clothes, yeah? My wife is busy right now. And bleach the white ones this time, unless you wanna ruin another set.”
“I’m not your maid,” I murmured.
“What was that?” he snapped.
“I said I’m not—”
He threw a half-empty soda can at the floor. “Then what the heck are you? Because you sure as heck ain’t doing anything else in this house! You don’t bring money in.”
My blood boiled.
“I raised you,” I snapped. “Fed you. Stayed up when you had fevers. I’ve been working since before you were born.”
“Well, maybe you should’ve worked on smelling better. You smell like a rotten corpse,” one of the twins piped.
“Yeah,” snickered his brother, Nash. “It’s embarrassing just seeing her. Our classmates said she’s so ugly, they get scared when she shows up to pick us up. Like some cast member from The Walking Dead.”
They both burst into giggles. Then Edmund grabbed his pistol off the mantel, inspecting it like it mattered more than me.
“We got money, Doris,” he muttered. “You know that. But I’m not wasting it on some useless help. You’re here. You got two hands. Why on earth would I hire a maid when you’re the woman of the house?”
The woman of the house. That was whatever he called me.
But I didn’t own anything. Not a car. Not a card.
Every cent I needed, I had to beg for. And if I asked for more? He’d demand an itemized receipt. Penny by penny.
---
That night, when the noise died down and the family disappeared into their rooms, I walked to the bedroom, pulled out the old red suitcase from the closet. The one he bought me in Naples before our wedding.
Before the world twisted into what it is now.
I looked down at my hands. They didn’t look like mine anymore. Lined. Broken. Tired.
I used to be someone. A Rossini. The daughter of a mafia king. The girl born with gold in her mouth and fire in her spine. But I gave that up for love. I disowned myself from my family, thinking Edmund’s love was enough.
And now?
Now I was just the ghost in the house.
No kingdom. No crown. I have enough already. Maybe, leaving this family is the best birthday I could give to myself.
Chapter 2
The next morning…
I heard about the dinner from Lyle—he blurted it out while stuffing potato chips in his mouth.
“Elizabeth rented the whole top floor of the Luciana Hotel! Fancy, huh? Dad says she booked it just for us. Big celebration.”
I paused mid-mop. “Us?”
Nash answered, “You’re not coming, Ma. Grandpa said you're... not up for it. I mean, look at you."
Not up for it... Like I was sick. Or senile. Or something to be pitied.
By sunset, the house was empty. Edmund had shaved. Wore the cologne he only touched for business deals and funerals. He stood tall in his navy suit, fixing Lyle’s and Nash collar like a proud grandfather, and Lester wore his best suit.
“Remember,” Edmund said to them, “Elizabeth’s doing this because she loves us. She's family.”
“We know, grandpa. That's why we love Elizabeth more than Grandma Doris.” they answered in unison.
And then, nothing. No goodbye. No we’ll bring you something. Just the sound of the front door closing like a coffin lid.
The quiet afterward was insulting. A hollow that screamed louder than any slap.
I stood in the middle of the hallway, in my house slippers, holding a basket of unfolded laundry. My stomach growled. I hadn’t cooked. What for?
Out of spite, I turned on the TV. They were on the news.
A live segment from the Luciana Hotel.
Cameras panned across crystal chandeliers and violin quartets. There they were—Elizabeth in her fur shawl. Edmund beside her. My son and his wife smiling like politicians. Lyle and Nash sipping soda in a tiny tuxedo.
The reporter called it: “A private Morroco gathering—Elizabeth’s homecoming. The family behind one of the largest shipping fortunes in the country.”
I was not in the shot. Not in the credits.
Not even in the whispers.
They toasted champagne. I sipped stale coffee.
They laughed under golden light. I wiped a smudge off the glass door.
And just when I thought it couldn’t cut deeper, the camera caught a brief, brutal moment:
Elizabeth leaned toward Edmund, whispered something, and they both laughed.
My son chuckled too. I didn’t know what she said. But I knew it was about me.
I felt it in my teeth.
***
Hours later, just after midnight, the door opened again. I turned. Hoped, stupidly, it might be my son. But no—it was them.
Elizabeth’s heels clicked confidently across the marble as she half-carried Edmund, drunk and swaying, into the house. His tie hung loose, lips pink from too much wine. Eyes bleary, glazed.
“Oh, Doris,” Elizabeth said with a smirk, spotting me standing by the staircase like a ghost. “Didn’t think you’d be awake.”
She steered Edmund toward the hall, her arm looped through his like a bride on her wedding day. “Lester and the twins are staying at my penthouse. Too tired to come back. But Edmund… well, he can’t sleep in strange beds. Poor thing.”
A lie.
I knew it.
She came here only to shove the truth down my throat.
“I told him not to worry,” she continued sweetly. “I’d bring him home. Take care of him. It’s what family does, right?”
Then she reached into her tote and tossed a plastic container at my feet. It bounced once, landed near the rug.
“Leftovers,” she said. “Go eat, sister-in-law. You look like a sickly little stick. You should really take better care of yourself. Bet you weight like 30kls."
I didn’t move.
My fingers curled into fists at my side.
“I’ll put Edmund to bed,” she added with a sly smile. “I know you two don’t share a room anymore. He told me. Said your side of the bed always smells like disappointment.”
I took one step forward. Just one. My palm twitched. Slapping her would’ve felt good. Almost holy. But what for?
My heart was already cracking in my chest like ice under boots. And the real punishment was in what I saw next—
Edmund, drunk and limp, smiled at her like she’d hung the moon. “Elizabeth’s so pretty,” he mumbled. “Smells like peaches. Mmm. Doris smells like dishwater and arguments.”
They climbed the stairs together. I stayed behind. Frozen. Shaking. She laughed once more before they disappeared down the hall.
And I realized—
They didn’t kill me.
They just replaced me.
***
I waited.
Not because I cared. Not because I hoped. But because I needed to know.
The clock ticked past one. Then two. Still no sign of her. The upstairs lights stayed on. No footsteps on the stairs. No sound of a door closing. Only muffled laughter. Then silence.
I sat on the edge of the couch in my robe, untouched coffee cooling on the table. The house smelled of lemon cleaner and betrayal.
Maybe she fell asleep in the guest room. Maybe she just—
A thump.
Then another.
Not heavy. Rhythmic. Too… intimate.
My blood chilled.
I rose, like something pulled me forward by the throat. I climbed the stairs, slow as a prayer. The hallway stretched like a graveyard path. The door to our bedroom—his bedroom now—was cracked open.
And I saw.
Elizabeth, unclothed, straddling Edmund. Her red nails dug into his chest like claws. Her head tilted back in a mess of curls. And Edmund—my husband, my life partner of 30 years—grunting beneath her like an animal.
My legs stopped working. My mouth went dry.
She cried out loud, shameless, her voice like a blade across my spine.
“Ohh… Brother-in-law—don’t stop. Fill me. Ruin me like she never let you.”
Edmund murmured, “You’re perfect. Not like her. You’re everything, Lizzy—”
I ran.
I didn’t cry. I ran. Straight to the downstairs bathroom and vomited until my ribs cramped.
The sound of them still echoed in my ears, louder than sirens.
“Harder—make me forget she ever existed!”
“You were always the one, Lizzy. Always.”
He was fifty. She was forty-five.
And still, they had no shame. Not even a sliver of decency. They weren't just in-laws. They weren’t even just lovers. They were conspirators. Twisting the knife slowly—together.
I stayed on the cold tile floor, knees pressed to my chest, my body shaking in waves I couldn’t stop. It wasn’t about the intimacy. It was about being erased.
Replaced.
They didn’t just want to humiliate me. They wanted to watch me rot in the house I built. But a woman who survives this?
She doesn’t stay on the bathroom floor. She remembers. She plans. She learns how to haunt quietly.
Chapter 3
I woke before the birds.
No alarm. No reason. Just the reflex of a woman trained to serve everyone but herself.
No tears. No ache. Just breath. In, out. Hollow.
I wiped my face with a damp cloth. Lip balm. Hair tied low. Not beautiful—just functional. Alive enough to pass.
Then I reached under the bed.
The red suitase was there. I dragged it out, unzipped it two inches. Cash from quiet sales—empanadas, lumpia—no questions asked. Passport, maiden name. A photo of me at eighteen. Smiling. Bold. Untouched by the slow erosion of marriage. I zipped it shut.
Downstairs, the kitchen was still dark. I boiled water, cracked eggs, sliced bread. My hands moved on their own. Stir. Season. Flip. Feed.
I was pouring coffee when I heard them behind me—bare feet against the hardwood. Her giggle first. Then his laugh.
They slid into the kitchen like a couple on a honeymoon. Elizabeth wore one of Edmund’s button-downs, half open. Her legs bare. Hair tousled like she’d just rolled off him, which she probably did. Edmund looked freshly showered, like their night together was some kind of baptism.
“Coffee, Doris,” she said, yawning like a cat in sunlight. “Make his strong, mine half and half. You know how he likes it.”
I handed them their mugs without a word.
Edmund didn’t even glance at me. Just sipped. Then said, “Bacon and omelet, Doris. Lizzy loves it the way I do. None of that salty mess you used to make. She's watching her figure—not that it shows, huh?”
Elizabeth chuckled and leaned against the counter like she owned it. “Not everyone wants to look like a stick wrapped in sadness, sweetie.”
I smiled. Not out of kindness. Just strategy.
Smile. Just smile. You’ve cooked for enemies before.
I cracked more eggs. Let the oil sizzle. Pretended I didn’t hear them talking about the night. About the penthouse. About how soft the sheets were. About how Edmund snored less when he was “with her.” About how my shampoo made him sneeze. They ate like I was the maid. Talked like I wasn’t real.
Then the front door flung open.
“Family’s here!” Lester’s voice boomed like a sitcom dad. “Let the party begin!”
Loisa followed behind him, heels clicking against the tiles, holding up a new designer purse like it was the Holy Grail. “Mom, look! Elizabeth gave me this! Can you believe it? Real leather! Italian! And these earrings? Gifted. God, she’s such a giver.”
She twirled like a child. Like she didn’t already own closets full of things Lester bought for her. Not that he ever bought me a single scarf.
Behind them, the twins stormed in with that careless energy only teenagers have. Lyle was wearing sunglasses indoors. Nash had something massive covered in brown paper.
Loisa laughed again, too loud. “Didn’t you hear? Lizzie gave us the whole penthouse. We slept like royals. You should’ve seen the tub. Bigger than our bedroom.”
“Oh, and the view,” Lester chimed in, opening a bottle of wine without asking. “From the 36th floor? Breathtaking. Sun hits the windows just right. Like a painting. Like—perfect.”
It was nine in the morning.
Nash and Lyle dragged their ‘surprise’ into the living room and tore off the cover. It was a giant, glossy print of the family, taken at the Luciana Hotel gala. Everyone dressed like aristocrats. Posed like nobility. Elizabeth in the middle. My sons beside her. Edmund’s hand resting on her body.
I wasn’t in the picture.
“Look, Grandma!” Nash said with a smirk. “Don’t we look like a real family here?”
Lyle added without blinking, “Too bad you weren’t there. Oh wait—yeah. You were left behind. Guess you looked too much like our maid.”
The room exploded with laughter. Even Edmund. Even my son. Even Loisa, wiping tears from her eyes.
Elizabeth just sipped her coffee and said cheerfully, “Don’t worry, Doris. I’ll leave some of my old dresses in your closet. And some perfume. They’re a little tight on me now, but I think you can squeeze in.”
Edmund chuckled, not even looking at me. “You can dress a corpse in Versace—it’s still a corpse. She still smells like disappointment.”
Loisa practically screamed laughing. Nash and Lyle clapped each other like it was a roast battle.
And me?
I picked up their dirty plates. I washed them one by one. I stared out the window at the neighbor’s lemon tree, blooming.
They think this is the end. But they haven’t seen what I look like when I stop begging to belong.
---
That night, when the laughter died and the wine ran out and the house went still, I crept into the living room. I stood there staring at it again.
The portrait. Massive. Hung dead-center in the sala like a crown jewel.
Lester made a whole production out of placing it there. Right above the console table. Right where no one could miss it. Where guests would pause and admire the happy family and say, “What a beautiful household you have.”
A lie, printed in high gloss.
I didn’t even hear Edmund come in until he was behind me.
“What, jealous again?” His voice always sounded rougher when he was bored. “You stare at that thing like it’s gonna cry for you.”
I didn’t answer. What was the point?
He scoffed. “Come on, Doris. If I could turn back time… I swear, I would’ve left you back in the province. Should’ve married Elizabeth from the start. She’s better than you in every freaking way. Classy. Successful. Knows how to run a business. Knows how to shut up.”
I turned away, still quiet.
That’s when he kicked me.
Right in the knee. My leg buckled, and I dropped with a thud I was too tired to even burst at. The floor met me like an old friend. Cold. Familiar.
The tears came without permission. Warm and humiliating. Not because of the pain. No. I think it was because of the sound of him walking away like I wasn’t even there.
“Enough drama,” he muttered. “You’re too old for this thing.”
Then his phone rang.
I could still hear my breath catching in my chest when he answered it.
The tone of his voice changed instantly. “Hey, baby,” he said, like I wasn’t even on the floor. “Mmm, I missed you already.”
I wiped my face slowly, one sleeve at a time.
His voice dropped into something warm. Giddy. Teenage. “Yeah, yeah, I’m packing. Can’t wait to see you in that bikini again. This cruise’ll be insane. You and me. Open sea.”
Chapter 4
I didn’t follow Edmund.
He walked away, still giggling with Elizabeth like a boy on prom night, whispering into his phone about bikinis and champagne like I wasn’t still on the floor with my knees aching and my soul halfway gone.
I stood. My knees creaked. My hand smudged across the tile, picking up dirt and pride. I walked to the bathroom. Closed the door quietly. Stared into the mirror like I didn’t know the woman staring back—eyes puffy, cheek red, hair undone. Like someone who tried to cry underwater and failed.
There’s no funeral. But I’m mourning.
Not for him. Not for us.
For me.
For the girl I used to be before love took her name and silence stole her voice.
Just then, he passed by. Didn’t knock. Didn’t ask if I was alive. Still on the phone, laughing—then paused long enough to say, “Pack my things. Business-leisure trip. We leave tomorrow.”
No “please.” No glance. No soul.
I nodded. Not that he was looking.
I dried my hands on the crooked towel. Walked to his room like a maid. Opened the closet. Chaos—suits tangled with polos, shoes under dirty laundry. A grown man living like a spoiled teen.
I started folding his shirts. White linen. Navy power. Cleaned his cufflinks with my sleeve.
Then I bumped the side table.
A folder slipped. I picked it up, expecting tax papers. But inside—cruise tickets.
I blinked.
I read them twice and my fingers tightening.
Edmund Morocco. Elizabeth Morocco. Lester. Loisa. Lyle. Nash.
My name wasn’t there.
Not even as a +1. Not even as a footnote.
The cruise? The one I dreamed of...
But now? Elizabeth’s birthday is in three days and he has time? He remembered hers.
Not mine.
Never mine.
I folded the tickets gently. Like they could bleed.
Then I packed his suitcase. Polished his shoes. Ironed his pants. Lined up his deodorant and vitamins like hotel staff would.
Lester walked in. No knock. “Ma, pack my stuff too, yeah? Loisa’s busy.” He sipped a beer. “Don’t forget the twins. Nash wants his charger. Lyle needs the blue swim shorts. Snacks too—they get bored.”
Then he left. And I packed it all.
Tiny shorts. Rolled t-shirts. Loisa’s perfume wrapped in a sock. Ziplocked snacks labeled with love.
Then I went to my room. Quietly. Closed the door.
I sat there on my bed, hands trembling, and my mind drifted back. Back to when I was just eighteen.
When Edmund wasn’t a man who kicked me in the knee or forgot my name on a cruise ticket.
Back when he said things that sounded like promises…
***
I was fresh out of school, a girl still unsure of her own shadow.
Edmund looked at me, eyes soft and serious, like I was the only thing that made sense.
“Doris,” he said, holding my hand like it was the only thing steady in his wild world, “I swear, I’ll take care of you. Always. No matter what happens, you’ll never have to worry about a thing.”
I smiled, my heart so full it felt like it might burst.
“Even if the whole world turns its back?” I asked, barely breathing.
He nodded. “Especially then.”
Then another flashbacks...
A summer evening under the stars. We lay on the grass, tangled limbs and whispered dreams.
“I don’t care about money, or power, or the legacy,” Edmund said, voice low and fierce. “You’re the only future I want. You and me, we’ll build something real. Something no one can take.”
I laughed, feeling invincible.
“You make me believe in forever.”
He kissed me like he meant it. Like forever was ours already.
But then came my father.
The man with a crown no one dared challenge.
When I told him I loved Edmund — his blood wasn’t the right kind, his family not the right name — my father’s face twisted with something colder than winter.
“Doris,” he said, voice like steel, “you’re dead to me. You don’t get to drag our name into this dirt.”
I stood my ground, tears burning but voice steady.
“I’m not your possession.”
He laughed, cruel and hollow. "You are my daughter, yes. But you’re no Rossini anymore,” he spat. “Marry that boy if you want, but don’t expect me to recognize you. You are dead to me. If you come back, I’ll kill you myself. And you know I don’t bluff.”
I swallowed hard. “I love Edmund.”
“You love a shadow. You’ll die in that darkness.”
---
And now—thirty years later—Edmund’s true colors bled through all those pretty words. That boy who promised to care for me, who whispered forever, was gone.
Replaced by a man who could kick me down and never look back. A man who packs his bags for a cruise with another woman and leaves me packing silence.
And I sit here, wondering how a love so loud became a ghost I can’t outrun.
I smiled bitterly and reached for the landline no one uses anymore. Dialed a number I hadn’t called in thirty years.
It rang.
Once. Twice. Three times.
Then—
“Hello?”
It was him.
My father. Older. Tired. But still him. Still warm in that quiet, exhausted way.
I couldn’t speak. Held the receiver like it was keeping me upright. Tears slipped down, soft and unstoppable.
“…F-father,” I whispered. My voice cracked. “…It’s me. Doris.”
Chapter 5
The line was still warm in my hand when I heard my father’s voice. Calm. Tired. Like the kind of tired that’s lived a thousand lonely nights waiting.
“Come home, Doris,” he said.
“I’ve been waiting for you for twenty years.”
Twenty years. Twenty years of waiting. And me, too afraid or too proud or maybe just too broken to pick up the phone.
My knees almost gave out, but I caught myself. Instead, I sank to the edge of the bed and let the tears fall.
“I’m coming home,” I whispered, voice barely a ghost.
He didn’t say anything more. Just the sound of his breath, steady and real, a lifeline. I hung up before I could say goodbye.
That’s when Edmund walked in. Like a shadow slipping through the cracked door. His eyes were cold — calculating — like he could smell the truth on me and hated it.
He didn’t even bother to pretend.
“I know you saw the tickets,” he said. Smirk like he was telling a joke. “Limited to six, Doris. Me. Elizabeth. Lester. Loisa. The twins. That’s it.”
I swallowed the lump in my throat.
“You’re deliberately excluded.”
His voice dropped to a dead calm. Like ice melting on concrete.
“When I get back, I’ll buy you a diamond set. Take you to Hawaii.”
Like those words were supposed to be a consolation prize. Then he turned, walked out without another glance. Just like I was air.
I stood there a moment, silent. Staring at the door he just closed behind him like a coffin.
The next morning, I moved through the motions in the kitchen. Omelets, bacon, toast — the smell sharp and mocking.
From the living room, I heard the twins. Laughing, shouting like it was Christmas morning.
“This cruise is the biggest ever!” Lester yelled. “We’re going to have so much fun!”
Their voices were bright, innocent. And cruel.
Then Elizabeth showed up, arms loaded with takeout bags.
She dropped them on the counter with a loud thud and sneered, “I don’t like Doris’s cooking,” she announced, loud enough for everyone to hear. “It’s like chewing on cardboard or swallowing salt straight from the shaker. Bland, over-salted, and completely uninspired—just like her.”
The room went still for a moment, and then she tossed her head, eyes gleaming.
“You know, family dinners used to mean something. Now? It’s just a reminder of how pathetic some people are. Doris tries, bless her heart, but you can’t polish a stone that’s already cracked all the way through.”
The twins giggled, but Lester wasn’t done.
“Yeah, Mum, I mean, why even bother pretending you care? You make food like you don’t want us here. Like you’re waiting for us to leave just to be alone with your failures.”
Loisa nodded, picking up the thread with a sharp grin.
“Honestly, it’s kind of sad, mum. You cook like you’re punishing us. Like every burnt edge and dry bite is your little protest. But we’re not fooled. We see right through you.”
Elizabeth snatched a bag from the counter, opening it with exaggerated care.
“So family, eat this. Real food. Food that people who actually matter deserve. We leave in an hour.”
Their eyes flicked over me like I was some ugly secret they all shared but refused to admit out loud.
I watched as they dug in like they were starving, piling their plates, asking for more drinks, more snacks.
“Get me water.”
“Pass the salt.”
“More napkins.”
Invisible, I faded into the background, biting down the bitterness that wanted to choke me.
Just before they left, Edmund’s voice cut through the kitchen like a whip.
“Where’s my wallet?”
He spun around, eyes sharp, accusing me without a word.
“You’re hiding it, aren’t you?” His eyes burned. “Because that’s what you do—hide things. Hide from responsibility, hide from respect, hide like the useless, jealous little nobody you are.”
I shook my head quietly.
He didn’t wait. His hand slapped my face. Hard.
The world spun. Blood poured from my nose like a cruel joke.
I collapsed.
The floor was cold and steady beneath me as my vision blurred. Then Elizabeth inhaled sharply, her voice dripping with fake innocence.
“Oh! Sorry, brother-in-law,” she said, voice syrupy sweet. “I must have taken your wallet by mistake while digging through my earrings. You know how clumsy I am.”
She pulled it from her bag with a smirk only I noticed. I knew. It was a setup. A way to make me small. To humiliate me in front of everyone.
The family gathered their bags like it was a holiday, smiling and shouting their goodbyes.
Lester, pretending to be kind: “Don’t worry, Mum. I’ll bring you a fridge magnet.”
Loisa added, “And I’ll bring you a keychain.”
“We’ll bring you dirty laundry, Grandma.” The twins laughed and even made silly faces.
Their words hit like knives, soft but sharp.
The door slammed shut behind them.
Silence.
I didn’t wait. Didn’t cry. I walked straight to the bedroom, dropped to my knees, and dragged my old bag out from under the bed. I grabbed it. Zipped it. Left everything else behind.
I took a cab and went straight to the airport.
Then my phone buzzed.
Edmund.
> Guard the house while we’re gone. We’ll be out for a week. Don’t mess anything up.
Another message followed instantly.
> Sorry I slapped you. But you provoked me. If only you weren’t always so jealous. You ruin things for yourself.
I stared at the words, the gall of it. A man who’d used his hands to silence me now using words to rewrite history. Still blaming me for his cruelty.
I smiled — not out of joy, but clarity.
Then I blocked his number.
Deleted the thread. Gone.
I slipped the phone into my coat pocket, stepped onto the plane, and didn’t look back once.
I was done guarding a house that had never been a home. I was going back to the only place that ever was.
Home.