Husband Gave Her Flat Away—Then Her CEO Brothers Arrived-heuh

I was nursing the twins when my husband suddenly said, in a cold voice, “My brother’s family will take your flat. You’ll sleep in the storage room at my mum’s place.” I froze, my hands shaking with anger. Then the doorbell rang. My husband jumped, his face turning pale, his lips trembling when he saw who was standing there—my two CEO brothers.

Emily Carter had learned that a person could be exhausted past tears.

The twins were only newborns, still folded into that fragile stage where every sound felt like a warning and every silence made her lean closer to check they were breathing.

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That morning, she was sitting on the sofa in the little living room, one baby at her breast and the other tucked into the crook of her arm, with a muslin cloth slipping off her shoulder and a cold mug of tea abandoned on the side table.

The flat was untidy in the particular way a home becomes untidy after babies arrive.

Not dirty, not neglected, just conquered.

Tiny socks on the armchair.

A hospital discharge form under a packet of wipes.

A folded bill with a red mark on it near Daniel’s mug.

A basket of laundry waiting in the narrow hallway because Emily had not had both hands free for long enough to move it.

Rain tapped softly at the window, turning the outside world grey and blurred.

Inside, the only warmth came from the babies and the small lamp in the corner.

Daniel stood near the television, dressed as though he was about to go somewhere, although he had not said where.

He had been pacing for ten minutes.

Emily had noticed, because since the twins were born, she noticed every shift in mood the way she noticed every change in their breathing.

A quiet husband could mean tiredness.

A pacing husband meant trouble.

She looked up at him and tried to keep her voice even.

“Are you going to tell me what’s wrong?”

Daniel stopped.

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