My phone buzzed. Samuel’s sister. Margaret.
“Lily,” she said the moment I answered. “I’ve been trying to warn you. He’s been asking about property law. Deeds. He thinks because he handled the taxes, he owns something. I told him that isn’t how it works, but you need a lawyer. Now.”
After the call, I sat at the kitchen table where I had served Samuel breakfast that very morning. Elena sat across from me, silent and solid.
“Marcus Fitzgerald,” I said. “He handled my father’s estate.”
While Elena called him, I walked through the house slowly. The walls I had painted. The floors I had refinished myself. Our wedding photo still hung in the living room, the old barn behind us, half collapsed then. Samuel had looked sincere in that picture.
I wondered when that stopped being true.
That night, I stood in Midnight Star’s stall, my hand resting against her warm flank. She shifted restlessly, the foal moving inside her.
“We’ll be fine,” I murmured, unsure whether I was speaking to her or myself.
The next morning, Samuel appeared in the kitchen doorway in his charcoal suit. Funeral suit. Bank suit. The one he wore when he wanted to look serious.
“We need to talk,” he said.
I kept slicing tomatoes, the knife steady.
“I won’t be staying,” he continued. “I’m leaving you. The ranch is sold. Filed yesterday.”
He slid the papers across the table.
“You can’t sell what isn’t yours,” I said.
“It’s done,” he replied, voice brittle. “Lisa’s coming by. You should pack.”
The Mercedes arrived right on time.
Lisa walked in without knocking, surveying my kitchen like she was already bored with it.
“I want to see the master bedroom,” she announced.
“The third step creaks,” I said calmly.
She laughed and climbed the stairs. Samuel followed, carrying her purse.
Elena appeared at the back door minutes later.
“They’re planning to sell the horses,” she said after they left. “Calling them assets.”
“They made a mistake,” I replied. “Several of them.”
By noon, the calls started. Neighbors. Bank managers. Friends.
Then Katie.
“Mom,” she cried. “Dad says you’re losing it.”
“Come home,” I said softly. “I’ll show you everything.”
When I hung up, I went back to the barn. The work still needed doing.