Emily’s text.

“Mother-in-law, remember to heat up the leftovers in the fridge. Don’t waste them.”

I read it, and something inside me died.

But something else woke up.

I opened the refrigerator. There they were. A half-eaten rotisserie chicken from the day before. Rice from Monday. Vegetables I had bought and cooked. Leftovers.

That was what I deserved, according to them. Their leftovers. Their scraps of attention. Their contempt wrapped in polite words.

I shut the fridge, took a deep breath, and typed back.

“Okay.”

Two letters. Nothing more.

But those two letters contained a decision that had been forming in me for months. Since the first time Emily spoke to me like hired help. Since Daniel stopped defending me. Since I understood I had given my life to people who no longer saw me as part of their family at all.

I went upstairs and took the suitcase out of the closet.

Because what they did not know, what they could not imagine while they were toasting with expensive wine, was that I had been preparing for six months. Six months of saving documents, recording conversations, taking photos, and building a case.