At Javier Bennett’s funeral, I kept one hand over my eight-week belly like my body already knew I needed to protect what no one else could see.
No one knew I was pregnant.
Not even Javier—he hadn’t lived long enough for me to tell him.
The service was ending in a quiet funeral home outside Boston, all black coats and staged sympathy, when my in-laws cornered me between the wreaths like they’d been waiting for the room to empty.
My mother-in-law, Paula Bennett, didn’t offer a hug. She offered a folder.
“The house and the car go to Lydia,” she hissed, sliding the papers toward me. “Sign.”
Lydia—Javier’s sister—stood beside her, eyes dry, mouth already curled like she’d won.
Behind them, Javier’s father, Ray Bennett, watched like an enforcer.
I blinked once, still seeing Javier’s casket when I closed my eyes.
I had bought the house before we married.
I paid for the car myself when my consulting firm finally took off.
And Javier—on the advice of his own notary—had signed a separate property agreement because he didn’t want his family “touching my life.”
They knew all of that.
“They’re mine,” I said, surprised by how calm my voice sounded.
Lydia’s lip lifted.
“Don’t be ridiculous. Javier’s gone.
Everything goes back to the family.”
“I am his family,” I said.
Ray grabbed my arm and dragged me toward a side wall—out of the main traffic, but not far enough to stay invisible.
“You’ll sign,” he growled, low. “And that’s that.”
“Let go of me,” I whispered, panic rising—not for myself.
For the life inside me.
Ray shoved me hard into the wall.
The impact knocked the breath out of me.
Before I could steady myself, a slap snapped my head to the side and Paula’s nails dug into my wrist like she wanted pain to write the message for her.
“Now you’re really alone,” she spat. “Without him, you’re nobody.”
I tasted blood and swallowed it back like a promise.
Then I pulled out my phone.
I didn’t shout. I didn’t bargain.
I looked at Lydia—still smiling like this was her victory lap—and hit a contact I’d saved for exactly this kind of moment.
“Do it,” I said into the phone.
That was it.
Two words.
Within ten minutes, Ray’s phone rang.
I watched his face change as he listened—color draining, posture cracking—until he exploded loud enough for the entire funeral home to turn.
The story doesn’t end here –
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