She straightened and crossed her arms. “I’m helping. Someone here has to be practical. You young women love to wallow.”
Ethan stepped forward. “Mom, stop.”
But she was already moving again, picking up the framed ultrasound photo from the dresser. The same one I had looked at every night before bed. The only image of the baby we lost. She glanced at it for a second, then dropped it into the box like it meant nothing.
Something inside me snapped.
I rushed forward, took the box from her hands, and slammed it down so hard it tipped, spilling everything across the floor. “You do not touch my baby’s things,” I said, my voice shaking so badly it barely sounded like mine. “You do not come into my house after what you said at the hospital, and you do not decide how I grieve.”
Linda gave a short, cold laugh. “Your house? Ethan bought this house. Let’s not pretend you built this family on your own.”
The words hit like a slap.
Ethan’s expression changed. I saw it happen. The confusion vanished, replaced by something harder. He looked at me, standing in socks among baby blankets and broken hope, then at his mother as if seeing her clearly for the first time.
“Mom,” he said, low and steady, “pick up your purse and leave.”
Linda blinked. “Don’t be ridiculous.”
“No,” Ethan said. “You leave now. And don’t come back until you understand what you’ve done.”
She stared at him, genuinely stunned, like no one had ever said no to her. Then she pointed at me. “She’s turning you against your own mother.”
I expected him to hesitate again.
Instead, he walked to the front door, opened it wide, and said, “If you say one more word to Claire tonight, I’m changing the locks.”
Linda’s face went pale.
But before she left, she turned to me and said, “You think you’ve won? Wait until the rest of the family hears what kind of wife you really are.”
Three hours later, my phone started blowing up with messages.
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