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Breaking Free from Toxic Love Novel Cover

Breaking Free from Toxic Love

I stood frozen in the doorway of my own home, watching as Victoria Hayes glided across my living room like she already owned it. Her children trailed behind her, Mason's eyes darting around greedily while Emma clutched a designer backpack to her chest. Two years. It had been two years since Victoria's voice on the phone had pulled Michael away from our daughter's bedside. Two years since Lily had taken her last breath without her father by her side. "Sarah," Michael's voice cut through my thoughts, sharp and impatient. "Don't just stand there. Help Victoria get settled." I met my husband's eyes, searching for any trace of the man I'd married. His gaze was cold, detached—the same expression he'd worn since Lily's funeral. "Of course," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper.
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Chapter 1

I stood frozen in the doorway of my own home, watching as Victoria Hayes glided across my living room like she already owned it. Her children trailed behind her, Mason's eyes darting around greedily while Emma clutched a designer backpack to her chest. Two years. It had been two years since Victoria's voice on the phone had pulled Michael away from our daughter's bedside. Two years since Lily had taken her last breath without her father by her side.

"Sarah," Michael's voice cut through my thoughts, sharp and impatient. "Don't just stand there. Help Victoria get settled."

I met my husband's eyes, searching for any trace of the man I'd married. His gaze was cold, detached—the same expression he'd worn since Lily's funeral.

"Of course," I managed, my voice barely above a whisper. "Where will they be staying?"

Michael's smile didn't reach his eyes. "Emma will take Ethan's room. Mason will have Lily's old room, and Victoria will stay in our bedroom."

The floor seemed to tilt beneath me. "And where will Ethan and I sleep?"

"You can take the guest room in the basement. Ethan can use the pullout couch down there."

Victoria stepped forward, her perfume overwhelming as she placed a manicured hand on Michael's arm. "Oh, Michael, I don't want to impose. We could take the basement—"

"Nonsense," Michael cut her off, patting her hand. "You're our guests. Sarah doesn't mind, do you, Sarah?"

I felt Ethan's small hand slip into mine, his fingers trembling. I squeezed gently, trying to reassure him even as my own heart hammered against my ribs.

"I need to speak with you privately," I said to Michael, keeping my voice steady.

He sighed dramatically. "Victoria, why don't you show the kids around? I apparently need to have a chat with my wife."

Victoria's smile was saccharine as she ushered her children deeper into my home. I pulled Michael into the kitchen, closing the door behind us.

"What are you doing?" I hissed. "You can't just move them into our home without discussing it with me first. And Lily's room? How could you?"

Michael leaned against the counter, arms crossed. "Victoria's going through a difficult divorce. She needs support right now."

"And what about us? What about Ethan? He's seven years old, Michael. He can't sleep on a pullout couch in the basement."

"It's temporary," he said dismissively. "And frankly, Sarah, after everything I provide for this family, I'd expect a little more gratitude and a lot less drama."

I stared at him, this stranger wearing my husband's face. "This isn't about gratitude. This is about respect. For me, for Ethan, and for Lily's memory."

Something dark flashed across Michael's features. "Don't bring Lily into this. Victoria and her kids need help, and we have the space. End of discussion."

He pushed past me, leaving me alone in the kitchen. Through the window, I could see Ethan standing alone in the garden, small shoulders hunched as he watched Mason examining his bicycle. My son looked so lost, so vulnerable.

My phone buzzed with a text. Ryan: *Just checking in. How are you holding up?*

I couldn't bring myself to respond. How could I explain that my husband had just invited the woman who had indirectly caused our daughter's death to live in our home? That he was giving her our bedroom, our son's room, our life?

That night, as I helped Ethan settle onto the lumpy pullout couch, I tried to make it seem like an adventure.

"It's like camping indoors," I said, tucking the blanket around him.

Ethan's eyes, so much like Lily's, looked up at me solemnly. "Why does Dad like them more than us?"

The question pierced my heart. "Oh, sweetheart, it's not about liking them more. It's complicated adult stuff."

"Mason said we have to leave soon because they're going to be Dad's new family," Ethan whispered.

I froze, rage and fear battling within me. "That's not true," I said firmly, though uncertainty gnawed at me. "We're your family, and nothing will change that."

But as I lay awake on the hard guest bed later, listening to laughter drifting down from upstairs—from my bedroom, where Victoria now slept—I wondered if Ethan's fears might be closer to the truth than I wanted to admit. My husband was slipping away, transforming before my eyes into someone I no longer recognized.

And I had no idea how to stop it.

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