Evelyn sat in the dim quiet of the afternoon, the clock ticking softly, the walls filled with photographs of children, birthdays, and lean Christmases. Each frame was proof of a life she had built from grit and sacrifice after her husband never came home.
From the hallway, voices rose, sharp enough to wound. Alex listed shelter options. Helen cut him off, unwilling to pay. Evelyn’s name was spoken like an obstacle, not a mother. No one came in to ask her feelings, only silence followed.
She remembered going without meals so her children could eat, sacrifices never confessed. She had been strong then. She would be strong now. Morning came, and Alex stood at her door, avoiding her eyes. “It’s time to pack up,” he said. Her voice trembled when she asked about the shelter. He nodded.
She folded clothes, tucked photographs between soft shirts, and carried her small world outside. Helen’s car idled at the curb. No words filled the heavy silence on the drive. Bare trees and dirty snow blurred by the window.
When the car stopped, Evelyn opened her eyes to gray gates and a field of stones. Confused, she whispered, “I’m still alive.” Helen walked ahead, stopping at a small, worn marker. “Emily,” Evelyn breathed. Her lost child, born and gone the same day.
Helen’s voice broke with anger. “I had a twin. You hid it.” Evelyn’s defense—wanting to protect a baby from sorrow—fell flat. “You never think we deserve the truth,” Helen spat.
Tears blurred Evelyn’s vision. She had carried grief alone, believing silence was love. Now it was turned against her. “Get in the car,” Helen said coldly.
At a shelter with peeling paint and tired light, Evelyn sat on a narrow bed, suitcase at her feet, hands trembling in her lap.