When A Soldier Came Home, His Family’s Cruel Scheme Fell Apart-hihehu

The slap came before I could finish saying no.

It cracked through the living room like a board snapping, sharp enough to make my teeth slam together and bright enough to turn the room white around the edges.

One second, I was standing beside the coffee table in the house my husband and I had spent two years turning into a home.

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The next, I was stumbling backward with both hands flying to my stomach, my shoulder hitting the wall underneath our wedding photo, my breath locked somewhere behind my ribs.

I was seven months pregnant.

That was the first thing my body remembered, even before my own pain.

My hand covered the round, heavy curve of my belly while the baby shifted once inside me, slow and startled, and all I could smell was the lemon cleaner I had used that afternoon mixed with Victoria Pierce’s perfume.

Outside, rain tapped against the front windows.

Inside, my husband’s family stood in my living room like they had every right to hurt me there.

Victoria, my mother-in-law, did not look ashamed.

She stood over me with her palm still lifted, her pearls sitting neat against her throat, her hair sprayed into a smooth silver shape that never moved, not even when her temper did.

“Get up,” she said.

Her voice was low and cold.

“Gold-diggers don’t get the privilege of crying. And don’t think for one second that the child you’re carrying makes you untouchable.”

I pressed my back harder into the wall, not because it helped, but because it kept me upright.

The wedding photo above my shoulder showed Julian and me laughing in front of a courthouse arch on a hot day when both of us were too broke for a real reception and too happy to care.

In that picture, his hand was wrapped around mine like he had already made a promise before the vows were ever said.

In that room, his mother stared at me as if I had stolen him.

Harper, my sister-in-law, leaned against the side of the sofa with a glass in her hand and a smile on her glossy red mouth.

She had always smiled that way when she wanted someone to feel small.

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