“She’ll come around,” Ryan would say. But she never did—not to me, and certainly not to Emma and Liam, my kids from a previous marriage.
One night, I overheard her call me a gold-digger. When I told Ryan, his jaw clenched. “This ends now.” He moved us to a new home, away from her, and loved my kids fiercely—not out of duty, but choice. Pancake Saturdays, bedtime stories, and forts became routine.
Then the call came—Ryan had died in a crash. At the funeral, Margaret hissed, “This is your fault.” Days later, she changed the locks and threw our things on the lawn. We slept in my car.
I called Ryan’s lawyer. “He left a will,” he said. Ryan left everything to me. Margaret was given $200,000—but only if she didn’t interfere.
She did.
By court order, the house was returned to us. Margaret lost everything.
When we pulled up, her belongings were in black trash bags on the curb—the same ones she used for ours.
Justice had a name.
And this time, it was mine.