“Take your brat and go to hell,” my husband snapped across the divorce courtroom, loud enough to stop the clerk’s typing.

“Take your brat and go to hell,” my husband snapped across the divorce courtroom, loud enough to stop the clerk’s typing.

And I remembered Eleanor’s voice.

Her daughter deserves a life where love does not sound like footsteps in a hallway.

I looked at Daniel.

“No,” I said.

His face changed.

“You’ll regret this.”

The bailiff tightened his grip.

I did not answer.

I turned away.

Ms. Vale was waiting near the elevator.

Up close, I saw the tiredness around her eyes.

Not weakness.

History.

She handed me an envelope.

“Mrs. Whitaker asked me to give you this after the custody order.”

My hands shook as I took it.

On the front, in slanted blue handwriting, was my name.

Clara.

Not Mrs. Reeves.

Not Daniel’s wife.

Clara.

I could not open it there.

Not in the courthouse hallway, with lawyers passing and Daniel’s voice still echoing somewhere behind me.

Ms. Vale seemed to understand.

“There is a car downstairs,” she said. “It will take you and Lily to the temporary residence. Security has swept it. New locks, cameras, and a protection team for the first week. After that, we can reassess.”

I blinked at her.

“That’s too much.”

“No,” she said gently. “It is not.”

I looked down at Lily.

She was staring at Ms. Vale with wide eyes.

“Is there a bed?” Lily asked.

Ms. Vale’s face softened.

“Yes.”

“Can my mom sleep there too?”

Something in me broke.

Ms. Vale crouched slightly. “There are several beds. But you can choose whatever makes you feel safest tonight.”

Lily considered this seriously.

“Can I bring Rabbit?”

“Rabbit is already in the car,” Ms. Vale said.

Lily gasped. “How?”

“Mrs. Whitaker was very thorough.”

For the first time that day, my daughter smiled.

It was small.

Fragile.

But real.

And I nearly sank to the courthouse floor from the force of it.

The house was not a mansion.

That surprised me.

Some part of me had expected Eleanor’s money to look like marble floors and cold rooms.

Instead, the car took us to a quiet white cottage at the end of a tree-lined street twenty minutes outside town. It had blue shutters, a porch swing, and a garden gone a little wild with lavender and rosemary.

Inside, the air smelled faintly of lemon polish and old books.

Lily walked from room to room holding Rabbit against her chest.

There was a yellow bedroom with a quilt folded at the foot of the bed.

A kitchen with copper pots hanging above the island.

A living room with shelves full of children’s books, novels, and framed photographs of people I did not know.

On the dining table sat a vase of fresh tulips.

Beside it was a note from Ms. Vale.

Groceries in the refrigerator. Security system code written inside the pantry door. Call anytime.

Lily touched the quilt in the yellow room.

“Is this mine?”

“For now,” I said.

She looked at me carefully.

“For how long?”

I knelt in front of her.

I wanted to promise forever.

I wanted to tell her no one would ever scare us again.

But children who have lived with fear deserve truth more than fantasy.

“For tonight,” I said. “And tomorrow. And we’ll figure out the rest together.”

She nodded.

Then she whispered, “Can he find us?”

“No.”

“Do you promise?”

I took both her hands.

“I promise that I will do everything in my power to keep you safe. And now there are other people helping me.”

She searched my face.

Children know when adults lie.

Finally, she leaned into me.

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