His Mother Brought Another Woman To Christmas Dinner. Emily Had The Deed-heuh

The first thing I noticed was the cinnamon.

Helen Turner always burned too much of it at Christmas.

Not the soft, flour-dusted kind that belongs in a warm kitchen, but the expensive kind that came in glass jars and sat beside silver candle holders like holiday cheer could be curated.

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I stood in her marble foyer with cold air still clinging to my coat and Liam’s hand resting lightly on my back.

Thirty people were already inside.

Thirty people who had watched me marry into the Turner family and never quite decided whether I belonged there.

My name was Emily Turner then.

I had already begun practicing Emily Carter again in my head.

It felt strange at first.

Then it started to feel like opening a window in a room where someone had been lying for too long.

Liam and I had been together seven years.

Married for four.

From the outside, we looked steady enough to make other people comment on it.

We had a four-bedroom colonial with black shutters, hydrangeas that bloomed wild and blue in summer, and a mailbox Liam promised to repaint every spring.

We had Sunday coffee on the back porch.

We had matching calendars.

We had jokes nobody else understood.

We had a Thai place where the owner brought Liam extra peanut sauce before he even asked.

He worked as a financial advisor at Turner and Associates, his father’s firm.

I ran a marketing consultancy from home, mostly crisis management, reputation repair, and brand recovery.

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