His New Wife Threatened the Roses. Then the Hidden Letter Appeared-habe

“Start packing already, because as soon as they read the will tomorrow, this house will be ours.”

That was the first thing Misty said to me after my father was buried.

Not “I’m sorry.”

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Not “How are you holding up?”

Not even the polite lie people offer when grief makes them uncomfortable.

She came to my father’s house three weeks after his funeral, stepped into his garden in heels too thin for the damp soil, and told me to start packing.

I was kneeling beside the white rose bushes when she arrived.

The pruning shears were cold in my hand, and the morning air smelled like wet dirt, fresh-cut stems, and rain drying on old brick.

Those roses had been there for fifteen years.

My father planted them the day I married Simon.

He said white roses meant clean beginnings, and back then, I had believed him.

I believed a lot of things back then.

I believed Simon when he said our marriage was the best decision he had ever made.

I believed my brother Jesse when he said family stayed family no matter what.

I believed my father Harrison would live long enough for me to ask all the questions I kept saving for some calmer day.

Then Simon left me for his assistant.

Jesse stopped returning my calls when my father got sick.

And Harrison Vale, the strongest man I had ever known, was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer eight months before Misty walked into that garden.

Cancer did not take him all at once.

It took him in cruel, precise pieces.

First his appetite disappeared.

Then his shoulders narrowed inside shirts that used to fit him.

Then his voice became softer, as if every sentence had to pass through pain before reaching the room.

I moved back into his house during the first month of treatment.

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