At 5 AM, the police found my 5-month pregnant daughter bleeding out at a freezing bus stop. “Her husband and his mother beat her,” the doctor whispered. “She and the baby won’t survive the night.” My heart completely stopped. Her arrogant, wealthy husband thought he could commit murder and get away with it. He didn’t know about my past. I didn’t cry. I made one phone call to the men I used to work with. His entire mansion was about to become a graveyard.

The criminal trial six months later was an absolute massacre. The high-definition photos of Chloe at the bus stop—the brutal, horrifying photos that the prosecutor forced the jury to look at in dead silence for ten full minutes—completely sealed their fate.

The judge, a stern woman who had absolutely no patience for entitled cruelty, looked down at Liam Sterling from her bench.

“You treated a human being, your own wife and unborn child, like garbage,” the Judge said, her voice ringing through the packed courtroom. “Now, the state is going to dispose of you.”

Guilty on all counts.

Liam received thirty years in a maximum-security penitentiary without the possibility of early parole. Eleanor received twenty years for conspiracy and aiding and abetting an attempted murder.

As the heavy-set bailiff grabbed Liam’s arm to lead him away in his bright orange jumpsuit, Liam stopped and looked back at the gallery. He locked eyes with me. He looked entirely broken, hollowed out, a ghost of the arrogant man he once was. He mouthed the word, Please.

I didn’t smile. I didn’t frown. I simply looked at him, tilted my head, and mouthed back two words:

Bus stop.

And as the courtroom doors closed behind him, Chloe squeezed my hand.

One year later.

The autumn air was crisp and smelled of woodsmoke. I sat comfortably on the wooden front porch of my small, cozy house. The leaves on the old maple tree were turning vibrant shades of gold and red.

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