At 7:42 the next morning, you stood on your own front porch with your shoulder bandaged under a cream blouse, your lawyer at your side, two police officers behind you, and a locksmith holding a metal case like a silent promise. The sky over Westfield Hollow was pale and clean, the kind of suburban morning built for joggers, school drop-offs, and people who still believed disaster only happened in louder neighborhoods. Your burn still stung every time the breeze touched the gauze, but the sharper ache sat somewhere deeper, in the place where patience finally turned into something colder and cleaner. When the first heavy footsteps sounded upstairs, you felt no fear at all, only the steady click of a decision that had finished making itself overnight.
Margaret opened the door in a pale blue silk robe and house slippers, one hand still smoothing the front tie as if the day’s biggest inconvenience had been waking before coffee. Her eyes moved across the porch in stages: first the uniforms, then the locksmith, then your attorney Dana Mercer, and finally you. When she saw the white dressing peeking above your collar, she didn’t look guilty or even startled. She looked irritated, which somehow made yesterday’s boiling water feel even uglier.
“What is this?” she demanded, as if the entire scene had been arranged to interrupt her breakfast.
Dana stepped forward before you had to say a word. She wore a camel coat, sharp heels, and the exact expression judges trusted and liars hated. “Margaret Bell,” she said evenly, “you are being formally notified that you are no longer welcome on this property. The homeowner is present. Officers are here for civil standby due to yesterday’s assault. The locks will be changed this morning.”
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