Her Husband Moved His Parents In. Then Dawn Changed Everything.-hihehu

Julianne had spent that evening doing the kind of work nobody notices until it stops getting done.

She wiped the dinner table with a damp cloth that smelled like lemon cleaner.

She rinsed the last plate.

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She folded the dish towel over the oven handle, turned off the stove light, and listened to the soft hum of the refrigerator filling the quiet kitchen.

It was nearly 8 p.m. in Boulder, and the neighborhood had settled into its usual weeknight rhythm.

A porch light across the street blinked on.

A dog barked twice and then stopped.

Somewhere down the block, a garage door groaned shut.

Julianne was thinking about nothing more dramatic than taking off her shoes and answering a few work emails when she heard a truck pull into her driveway.

She froze with the dishcloth still in her hand.

Marcus had not mentioned anyone coming over.

He had not texted.

He had not called from the road.

By the time Julianne reached the front window, the truck door had already opened, and Barbara was stepping out like a woman arriving for a stay she had planned weeks ago.

Three suitcases came first.

Then a box of medication.

Then an antique lamp wrapped badly in a towel.

Then a birdcage with a canary hidden under a blanket, the little thing shifting inside as if it understood the house was about to change.

Harold followed, dragging a folding chair and a black bag stuffed with shoes.

Marcus opened the door before Julianne could ask a single question.

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