After Her Husband Died, His Family Tried To Steal Their Baby-Quieen - Chainityai

After Her Husband Died, His Family Tried To Steal Their Baby-Quieen

The lock clicked behind Mara Hayes before the funeral flowers had even stopped dripping rainwater onto the floor.

It was a small sound.

Too small for the end of a life.

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Too small for the beginning of whatever Celeste Hayes had planned.

Mara stood in the third-floor bedroom with one hand on the curve of her stomach and the other still clutching the sleeve of the black wool coat she had worn to the cemetery.

Her fingers smelled like lilies, wet soil, and the cheap paper tissues from the funeral home.

Six hours earlier, she had watched her husband, Caleb, disappear under red Virginia clay.

Six hours earlier, Celeste Hayes had stood beside the grave in a black veil and told Mara she should not be alone.

“You’re carrying Caleb’s child,” Celeste had said. “Whatever happened between us, family takes care of family.”

Mara had wanted to believe her.

That was the embarrassing part.

Celeste had never liked her.

Not when Caleb brought Mara to the estate for the first time, still wearing her waitress shoes because she had come straight from a double shift in Norfolk.

Not when Caleb married her at a courthouse with two friends and a grocery-store cake.

Not when Mara mailed ultrasound pictures and Celeste returned the envelopes unopened.

To Celeste Hayes, Mara was not a daughter-in-law.

She was a mistake with a marriage certificate.

Still, grief makes people reach for hands they already know will hurt them.

When Celeste put one gloved hand on Mara’s shoulder at the cemetery, Mara saw what she wanted to see.

A grieving mother.

A family trying to close ranks.

Someone who missed Caleb too.

So Mara got into the black car.

She remembered the iron gates closing behind them.

She remembered Archer, the oldest of Caleb’s seven brothers, wrapping a chain through the bars and locking it with a thick padlock.

She remembered telling herself that wealthy families had strange habits when reporters were near.

By the time her phone lost service, it was too late.

Now the bedroom door would not open.

Mara twisted the brass knob until her palm burned.

She shoved her shoulder into the oak once, then again, but the pressure in her belly made her stop.

The baby shifted under her hand.

Mara swallowed hard.

“Celeste?” she called.

No answer.

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