Part 5: The Fall
The collapse came fast.
Julian lost his job. Then the house. Then the credit line.
My parents had co-signed the mortgage. When he fell, they fell with him.
Chloe found out the life she thought she’d married into was gone in under a week.
My mother called first.
She cried. Begged. Said she hadn’t known it would go this far.
That was a lie. People like her always know exactly how far they’re willing to go. They just hate the bill.
My father called once. He didn’t apologize. He said, “You made your point.”
I told him, “No. You did.”
Then I blocked the number.
Miller and the men from David’s old unit came by every few weeks. They checked locks, checked cameras, checked in on me. They called the baby “the little operator.” They brought groceries I didn’t ask for and stories about David I hadn’t heard before. Stories where he laughed. Stories where he was scared. Stories where he came home in his head even when his body didn’t.
Those mattered more than sympathy.
By the time winter broke, I had a nursery painted, a military contract finalized, and a life that belonged to me.
No family approval. No begging. No explanations.
Just work. Air. Safety.