Stranded With Two Children, She Was Offered A Billionaire’s Marriage Deal-heuh

Sarah Mitchell had never imagined the lowest point of her life would have the sound of tyres hissing over wet tarmac.

She had imagined shouting, perhaps.

A final slammed door.

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A letter arriving with words she could not pay her way out of.

Instead, it was almost quiet.

Just the long grey road, the fading light, two exhausted children, two broken suitcases, one torn holdall, and a purse containing exactly forty-seven pence.

Ava stood close enough to Sarah’s side that her little shoulder pressed into her hip.

Every few minutes, she opened the empty lunch tub and looked inside, not because she expected to find anything, but because children sometimes keep checking for miracles when adults have run out of them.

Ethan stood on Sarah’s other side, too still for an eight-year-old boy.

His hair was damp at the edges.

His trainers were muddy.

He had stopped asking when the coach was coming, which frightened Sarah more than the question ever had.

The road stretched both ways with no promise in either direction.

Cars passed, headlights blurred by drizzle, each one slowing in Sarah’s imagination before rushing on and leaving them in the wind.

Her coat was too thin for the evening.

A receipt from the service station sat folded in her pocket, soft from rain, showing the cheapest food she had managed to buy and split between three people.

One packet of crisps.

One bottle of water.

Nothing else.

She had kept the receipt because she had a strange habit of keeping proof, even when proof helped no one.

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