“Dad said Mom could stay here with us,” he said. “I heard him.”
Patrick turned on him sharply, and the sudden movement made my children freeze.
That was when something inside me finally broke.
“Do not threaten my son again,” I said, holding my baby tighter.
Patrick laughed.
“And what will you do? Fight us with what money?”
Margaret threw another bag onto the wet ground. Clothes spilled into the mud as my daughters cried and my twins clung to my skirt. Little Sophie burned with fever against my shoulder.
I looked at the windows.
Relatives. Neighbors. Guests.
Everyone watched.
No one helped.
For fourteen years, I had stayed quiet for Andrew’s sake. I endured their insults, their judgment, their cold smiles. But that night, my silence ended.
Inside my diaper bag was a yellow folder Andrew had given me three weeks before he died.
“If they ever try to force you out,” he had whispered, “find attorney Rebecca Stone. And don’t open this until that day comes.”
I turned back to Patrick through the rain.
“Before you celebrate,” I said, “you should check who actually owns this house.”
His face went pale.
Margaret stopped smiling.
And suddenly, the entire Callahan family went silent.
Because what happened next was the one thing they never saw coming.
What would you have done in Cynthia’s place—walk away quietly for the children’s sake, or confront the family right there in the storm?
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