The night was colder than I expected. Late autumn had come with a chill that clung to the air, biting through my coat as if it were nothing more than a thin layer of paper.
Mark stood in the doorway, his hand on the doorknob, ready to close us out of our own home.
“You can’t do this,” I said, my voice barely more than a whisper.
He didn’t respond, just glanced back once with an expression that was not entirely cruel, but unsettlingly confident.
Laura, his mistress, stood behind him. Her presence was a shadow that had lingered too long in our lives, now fully realized in this moment of betrayal.
The children clung to me, their small bodies shivering against the cold.
“Mom, where are we going?” my daughter asked, her voice trembling.
I didn’t have an answer. Not yet.
Mark had always managed the finances, steering them with a mix of charm and threat that left little room for questioning. Now, it seemed he believed he had secured our future—his future—with my father’s fortune.
But there was something he didn’t know, or perhaps he did, and it was that knowledge that fed his confidence.
