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THE EX WIFE WHO ROSE FROM THE ASHES
img img THE EX WIFE WHO ROSE FROM THE ASHES img Chapter 2 THE ONLY DAUGHTER IN-LAW
2 Chapters

Chapter 2 THE ONLY DAUGHTER IN-LAW

**LUNA'S POINT OF VIEW**

Nobody moved.

Rose stood in the doorway and the whole room held its breath. That was the effect she had, I had noticed it before at family dinners, at birthday gatherings, at the few events where Ethan had brought me and his family had rearranged their faces into acceptable expressions. When Rose entered a room, people became very aware of how they were standing.

She was not tall. She was not loud. She did not raise her voice or make any grand entrance. She simply looked at everything with those sharp, unhurried eyes, and the people in the room felt it.

Emily straightened. Eva put her hands behind her back. Even Ethan shifted slightly, the first uncertain movement I had seen from him all afternoon.

Sara's composure was the only thing that did not change, but something in her jaw tightened.

Rose walked forward. Her steps were measured, careful, but she did not hesitate. She moved past Emily without a glance. She passed the sofa where Sara sat and did not stop. She crossed the room until she reached me, and she did something no one else had done since I walked through that door.

She took my hand.

Her fingers were thin and cold and they wrapped around mine with more steadiness than I had in my whole body at that moment. I had to press my teeth together to keep my face still.

"Luna." Her voice was quiet but it filled the room the way a candle fills a dark space, small and necessary. "Come and sit down."

"Mom, this doesn't concern..."

"Emily." Rose did not turn around. She did not raise her voice. She said the name the way you say it when you are not asking for quiet but informing someone that their noise has already ended. "I will hear myself think."

Emily closed her mouth.

Rose guided me to the armchair near the window, the one I had always liked because it faced the garden. She waited until I sat. Then she turned around and looked at the room, at all of them, with an expression I could not fully read.

"Which one of you," she said slowly, "wants to explain to me what this woman has done to deserve being treated this way in her own home."

Nobody answered.

"The papers," Rose said, nodding at the divorce papers still in Ethan's hand. "Who prepared them."

"I did." Ethan's voice was steady. "It was my decision."

"On what grounds."

"She made Sara run away two years ago."

"Luna." Rose turned to me. Not to Ethan. To me. "Did you do this."

It was not even a question the way she said it. It was something else. It was the first time anyone in that room had directed a sentence at me that was not an accusation or a dismissal.

"No," I said. My voice came out rougher than I intended. "I did not."

Rose nodded once. Then she turned back to Ethan.

"I have known this girl for two years," she said. "I have watched her in this family. I know what she is and I know what she is not. And I will tell you now, in front of all of you, so that no one in this room can later say they did not hear it clearly." She paused. "Luna is the only daughter-in-law I recognise. The only one. Whatever papers you are holding, whatever decision you think you have made, it does not change that."

The silence after that was a different kind of silence.

Emily made a sound low in her throat. Eva looked at the floor. Sara's hands, still folded in her lap, pressed together until the knuckles went pale.

Ethan looked at his grandmother with an expression I had never seen on his face before. Not anger. Something closer to discomfort. The look of a man who had been certain about something and was now less certain but was not ready to admit it.

"Grandma," he said carefully, "this is between Luna and me."

"Then why is half the family standing in the room," Rose replied.

No one had an answer for that.

She looked at Sara then. A long, deliberate look that Sara met with her chin up and her face composed, but I saw her swallow.

"You were engaged to my grandson," Rose said to Sara. It was not a question. "And then you left. And now you are back and sitting in this young woman's home while my grandson hands her papers." She paused again. "I see everything I need to see."

Sara opened her mouth.

"I did not ask you to speak," Rose said.

Sara closed it.

I sat in that armchair and watched all of it and felt something in my chest that I did not have a word for. It was not relief. Relief is light. This was heavier than that. This was the feeling of being seen after a very long time of being invisible, and it hurt the way feeling returns to a limb that has gone numb, painful before it is anything else.

I had not wanted to marry Ethan.

That was the truth I had never said out loud to anyone, not even to myself in the clearest moments. I had been in love with him, yes. That part was also true, and it sat alongside the other truth the way two things can exist together even when they contradict each other.

I had watched him for a long time before any of this. Long before he was ever my husband. He had been with Sara first, their engagement announced at a dinner my father had hosted, and I had sat at that table and smiled and congratulated them and later gone to my room and pressed my face into my pillow for reasons I told myself had nothing to do with Ethan specifically.

He had been Sara's. That was simply how it was.

And then his company started failing.

I did not know the details at first. My father came to me one evening and sat across from me in his study with the careful expression he used when he wanted something and was deciding how to present it. He told me that Ethan's family was in serious trouble. That the company had debts that were going to become public. That a scandal of that scale would ruin them, the name, the standing, everything they had spent generations building.

He told me the solution was a marriage. That if I married Ethan, it will stabilize the company. That Sara had already withdrawn from the engagement when the trouble started and that will affect both families. That Ethan's grandmother had personally requested it.

I remember looking at my father and thinking about my mother's grave and the woman in our kitchen who knew where the good cutlery was, and I thought, this is what he does. He arranges things to suit himself and then presents them to me as options.

"You want me to marry a man who just came out of an engagement with Sara," I said.

"Sara is not relevant," my father said.

She was always relevant. She had been relevant since the day she arrived in our house. But I did not say that.

Rose had come herself, two days later. She had come to our house and sat in our front room and she had looked at me with eyes that were already old and tired and full of something genuine, and she had asked me. Not told me. Asked me. She said she would not pretend it was a small thing she was requesting. She said she knew what she was asking a young woman to carry. She said she was sorry, and it was the first apology anyone had given me in a very long time, and I had felt it go all the way down.

I had said yes.

Not for my father. Not even entirely for Rose, though her asking had mattered more than she knew. I had said yes because I was twenty-four years old and I was tired of standing on the outside of things and I had told myself that maybe this was a door opening. That maybe Ethan would see me. Really see me. That maybe what had started as an arrangement could grow into something real.

Two years later I was sitting in my own armchair watching him hold divorce papers, and Sara was on my sofa, and I finally understood that I had built everything on a surface that was never going to hold.

Rose was still standing in the centre of the room. She looked at Ethan once more, long and steady, and then she looked at me.

"Go and rest," she said quietly. "We will talk later."

I stood up. My legs felt strange under me, like they belonged to someone who had been standing in cold water for a long time. I picked up the grocery bags from the floor out of habit, the bread, the coffee, the yogurt, and I walked toward the hallway without looking at Ethan or Sara or Emily or Eva.

I felt Sara's eyes on my back the whole way.

Not the patient, composed look she had worn earlier. This was different. I had known Sara long enough to know the difference between her performances and her real feelings, and what I felt on my back as I walked away was not performance.

It was hatred. The genuine kind, the kind that has been building for years and is finally no longer interested in hiding.

I walked down the hallway. I went into the bedroom, our bedroom, closed the door behind me, and stood very still in the middle of the floor.

The room smelled like Ethan's aftershave. His jacket was on the back of the chair. His watch was on the nightstand, the expensive one his mother had given him that he always took off at home because it was heavy.

I set the grocery bags down on the floor. I sat on the edge of the bed.

My hands were shaking. Not from fear. From something that was trying to become something else, something harder and less easy to break, but was not quite there yet.

Rose's voice came back to me. The only daughter-in-law I recognise.

Someone had said it out loud. Someone had stood in that room and said it.

I did not know what that changed. I did not know if it changed anything at all. The papers still existed. Ethan had still looked at the floor. Sara was still on my sofa with her hands folded and her face certain and her whole presence in my life like a door that kept opening no matter how many times I pushed it shut.

But something small and very stubborn had started in my chest.

I pressed my hand flat against my sternum and sat with it.

It was not hope exactly. It was something quieter than hope and more difficult to extinguish.

Outside the door, voices had started up again.

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