So she moved through the days numb, packing a life into boxes like someone clearing out a stranger’s belongings.
Three suitcases of clothes. Two boxes of personal items. Photographs of her parents. Letters from her mother. A few books from her grandmother. That was all she could claim as truly hers.
On day twenty-eight, Peggy stood at the sink and overheard Steven and Catherine speaking in the dining room.
“I honestly cannot believe father left her anything,” Catherine said with casual cruelty. “That Milbrook property is probably worth fifty thousand. He should’ve left her nothing.”
Steven chuckled. “Forty years is a long time to string someone along, even if she was essentially just the help. Milbrook was his conscience payment without reducing what we got.”
They laughed together.
Peggy gripped the sink so hard her knuckles whitened.
She wanted to scream. To throw a plate. To storm in and tell them exactly what she thought.
She didn’t.
Because forty years of training had taught her to swallow her voice. Avoid scenes. Be gracious.
Even now, the conditioning held.
On the final morning, Peggy walked through each room one last time expecting sadness.
Instead, she felt almost nothing.
The bedroom where she slept beside Richard for decades felt like a hotel room after checkout.
The guest bedrooms she’d kept preserved for stepchildren who rarely visited felt like museum exhibits of disappointment.
The kitchen where she cooked thousands of meals felt like a stage.
Only the garden hurt.
Standing among roses she planted that first spring, feeling cold air on her cheeks, Peggy realized the garden was the only place she’d ever been fully herself.
And now it would belong to strangers.
At one p.m., she loaded the Civic with her suitcases and boxes. She took the wedding photo from the mantle. Steven objected—“Technically house property”—but Peggy took it anyway because she was leaving and for once, she refused to be told what she could keep.
Steven arrived early, checking his watch.
“The movers will be here at two,” he said. “I’ll supervise everything.”
Peggy looked at him, really looked at him—this man she’d tried to mother in her own quiet way, this man who had resented her for forty years.
“Steven,” she said quietly, voice carrying more weight than she expected, “do you have any idea what it’s like to give someone forty years and be told it meant nothing?”