My stepmother attempted to throw me out while I was carrying twins, but my dad had prepared one final surprise — and it changed everything.

My stepmother attempted to throw me out while I was carrying twins, but my dad had prepared one final surprise — and it changed everything.

Two days after the funeral, Veronica dropped the mask. I was still in pajamas, struggling to swallow a piece of toast, when she glided into the kitchen in silk sleepwear, red lipstick perfectly applied, heels clicking. She didn’t sit. She didn’t ask how I was.

She said flatly, “You need to start packing.”

I froze. “What?”

“You have 36 hours,” she said, casually pouring wine mid-morning. “This house is mine now. I don’t want you or your… bastards here.”

My stomach dropped. “Veronica, I’m due in two weeks. Where am I supposed to go?”

She shrugged. “Motel? Shelter? Not my problem. But you’re not squatting here. I won’t raise someone else’s babies under my roof.”

I pushed myself upright, gripping the counter. “Dad would never have allowed this.”

Her lips curled into a cruel smile. “Dad’s not here. I am.”

Then she grabbed her phone. “Mike? Yeah. Come over. We’ve got a problem.”

That’s how I learned about Mike — her boyfriend — a tanned, arrogant man who swaggered in an hour later like he already owned everything.

“Break the door,” Veronica told him lightly, pointing toward the guest room. “She doesn’t belong here.”

I called the police. My voice trembled, but I forced the words out: “My stepmother is trying to force me out. I’m 38 weeks pregnant. Please, send someone.”

They arrived quickly, stopping Mike before he could touch anything. But I understood the truth — I couldn’t remain there. No job, no savings, no Ethan — I had nowhere left to turn.

I packed clumsily, hands shaking so badly I kept dropping clothes. The guest room looked like chaos had swept through it.

I ended up at a women’s shelter — drained, swollen, swallowing tears. As I dragged my torn suitcase across the floor, something slipped free — a thick manila envelope.

My heart clenched.

It was the envelope Dad had handed me a month earlier on the porch while we watched the sunset with tea.

“Em,” he’d said quietly, pressing it into my hands. “Don’t open this until I’m gone.”

I’d hidden it away, too scared to consider why. Until now.

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