Her Mother-In-Law Poured Tea On Her, Then The Cameras Woke Up-Tep

The tea hit my chest before I understood that Margaret had decided to stop pretending.

It was not the splash that terrified me first.

It was the care she took with it.

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She knelt beside me on the living room carpet, tilted her porcelain cup with two steady fingers, and watched the steaming tea pour across my blouse as if she were watering a plant she hated.

My throat had already swollen almost shut.

My hands had turned useless.

The chandelier above me blurred into gold circles, and the rough fibers of the carpet scratched against my cheek every time I fought for another breath.

“Die quietly, trash,” Margaret whispered.

Her voice was soft enough that anyone outside the room might have thought she was praying.

“So my son can finally collect your life insurance and marry a woman with breeding.”

I could not scream.

I could not move.

I could only stare through the pain and force myself not to close my eyes.

Because the brass lamp beside her knee was watching.

The smoke detector above us was watching.

The bookshelf clock behind Daniel’s shoulder was watching.

And if the emergency share link had worked the way I had built it to work, someone else was watching too.

Twenty minutes earlier, dinner had still looked normal.

That was the cruelest part of it.

There had been chicken on the table, a green salad in a glass bowl, iced tea sweating in tall glasses, and Margaret sitting at the end of the dining room like a woman who believed every chair in my house belonged to her.

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