“Get out and take your bastards with you!”
My mother-in-law, Patricia Collins, shrieked the words so loudly that her spit landed on my cheek. I stood there stunned, holding my ten-day-old twin daughters against my chest, their tiny bodies trembling beneath thin blankets. Snow drifted down the driveway, the air sharp and unforgiving.
My husband, Andrew Collins, didn’t stop her.
Instead, he grabbed my arm and shoved me forward, nearly making me lose my balance. “Just go, Claire,” he snapped. “You’ve embarrassed this family enough.”
I looked at him in disbelief. Ten days ago, I had nearly died giving birth to our twins. Ten days ago, he’d held my hand and promised we were a family. Now, he wouldn’t even meet my eyes.
“You said you loved them,” I whispered, adjusting the babies as one began to cry.
Patricia laughed bitterly. “Don’t play the victim. You trapped my son with those babies. A poor little freelance designer pretending she belongs in this house.”
That house. The massive stone mansion glowing warmly behind them. The same house I had quietly purchased years ago through a holding company. The same house they now believed they were throwing me out of.Andrew pushed the front door open wider. “We’re done. You can go back to whatever tiny apartment you crawled out of.”
I stepped onto the icy pavement barefoot. The door slammed shut behind me.
For a long moment, I just stood there, breath fogging the air, my daughters crying softly. Pain radiated through my body, but something else settled in its place—clarity.
They thought I was powerless. They thought I was disposable.If you were in my place, would you have revealed the truth sooner—or waited, like I did, until they showed their true faces?
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