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Thanksgiving Dinner Deception Novel Cover

Thanksgiving Dinner Deception

I'd been cooking since dawn. The turkey had been basting for hours, filling the house with that warm, golden smell that's supposed to mean family and gratitude. I'd made Eleanor's favorite cranberry sauce from scratch, the one with orange zest that takes forever to set properly. The table gleamed under the chandelier, each place setting arranged with the expensive china Eleanor insisted we use for holidays. My hands ached from peeling potatoes. My back hurt from standing. But I'd smiled through it all because this was what you did for family. This was what made a home. The doorbell rang at exactly six o'clock. Eleanor was always punctual.
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Chapter 3

I stood frozen as Eleanor and I stared at the shattered remains of my phone. The realization hit me like a physical blow—I was trapped in a house with people who had been plotting against me for months, maybe years.

A soft knock on the doorframe broke our standoff. Wilson stood there, shoulders hunched, his eyes darting between Eleanor and me before settling somewhere around the floor. In his hands was a cream-colored envelope.

"Florence," he said, his voice barely above a whisper. It startled me—Wilson rarely addressed me directly. "This is..." He cleared his throat. "This is what we agreed was fair."

He stepped into the room and placed the envelope on the dresser, his movements careful, as though approaching a wild animal. "Thirty thousand dollars. Cash."

My stomach lurched. They'd already withdrawn the money. They'd had it ready.

"Take it," Wilson continued, his voice taking on an almost pleading quality. "Accept your role as the child's mother. It's the... the cleanest solution." He glanced quickly at Eleanor, seeking approval. "There are uglier alternatives, Florence. Much uglier."

The threat hung in the air, unspoken but unmistakable.

"Get out," I whispered, my voice shaking. "Both of you, get out of my room."

"This isn't just your room," Eleanor snapped. "Nothing in this house is just yours."

I grabbed my purse from the nightstand, suddenly desperate to escape. "Fine. Then I'll leave."

I pushed past them, half-expecting Eleanor to grab me again, but she simply watched with cold fury as I hurried down the hallway. Connor stood in the dining room, bouncing the crying baby awkwardly in his arms. Our eyes met for a brief moment. His were pleading, confused—as if he couldn't understand why I wasn't playing along with their script.

"Florence, wait—" he started.

I didn't wait. I grabbed my car keys from the hook by the door and fled into the cold November air.

My hands shook so badly I could barely get the key in the ignition. Tears blurred my vision as I backed out of the driveway, nearly hitting the mailbox. I had no destination in mind, just away—away from the Bell house, away from the conspiracy, away from five years of lies.

I ended up at a coffee shop downtown, one of those chain places with free Wi-Fi and uncomfortable chairs designed to keep customers from staying too long. The barista gave me a concerned look as I ordered, probably noticing my red eyes and trembling hands.

"Can I use your phone?" I asked after paying for my untouched coffee. "It's an emergency."

She hesitated, then nodded, sliding the store phone across the counter.

I dialed Rachel's number from memory, praying she still had the same one from college. The phone rang three times before her familiar voice answered.

"Hello?"

"Rach?" My voice cracked. "It's Florence."

"Flo?" Her tone immediately shifted to concern. "What's wrong? Why are you calling from a strange number?"

"Everything." The tears I'd been holding back broke free. "Everything is wrong. Connor—his family—they've been..." I struggled to find words that could encapsulate the magnitude of the betrayal. "They brought his mistress's baby to Thanksgiving dinner. They want me to pay thirty thousand dollars to buy it and raise it as my own."

Saying it out loud made it sound even more insane than it had felt in the moment.

"What?" Rachel's voice rose in disbelief. "Are you serious?"

"They've been planning it for months, Rach. There were baby supplies hidden in our closet. They had the cash ready."

"Oh my God, Flo." I could hear the horror in her voice. "Where are you now?"

"Some coffee shop downtown. I just ran. I didn't know where else to go." I wiped at my tears with a napkin that immediately disintegrated. "I can't go back there. I can't."

"Of course you can't." Rachel's voice hardened with protective fury. "Text me the address of the coffee shop. I'm coming to get you. You're staying with me tonight."

"I don't have my phone. Eleanor broke it when she tried to grab it from me."

"She what?" Rachel's voice rose even higher. "Jesus, Flo, that's assault!"

"Just the start of it, I think," I said, my voice hollow. "Can you look up Moonbeam Coffee on 5th Street?"

"I'm on my way. Don't move. And Flo?"

"Yeah?"

"This isn't your fault. None of it."

I hung up and returned the phone to the sympathetic barista. As I sat waiting for Rachel, my phone notification sound pinged from several nearby customers. I watched as they checked their devices, some frowning, others raising eyebrows.

One woman at the next table gasped softly. "Oh, that poor family," she murmured to her companion. "Imagine your wife just abandoning you on Thanksgiving with a family crisis."

A cold dread washed over me. I leaned slightly to glimpse her screen.

It was the neighborhood community group. And there, at the top of the feed, was a post from Eleanor Bell:

"Prayers needed for our family tonight. Our daughter-in-law has abandoned her husband and family during a time of great need on this Thanksgiving holiday. Some people simply cannot handle family responsibilities when real challenges arise..."

The war had begun.

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