He didn’t congratulate me. He took my phone, glanced at the email, then looked at me with a cold expression that made my stomach drop.

“Good,” he said. “Then I don’t need you here anymore. My parents are moving in. You’re leaving today.”

I laughed instinctively. My brain refused to accept what I had just heard.

“Excuse me?”

“Don’t act clueless,” Linda interrupted, folding her arms. “A woman on her own doesn’t understand family. We do.”

Something inside me snapped.

“I paid for this house,” I said, meeting his eyes. “Every payment. Every repair. Every bill.”

Ryan stepped closer.

“And I let you live here,” he replied. “That’s enough. This house is for people who actually matter to me.”

It wasn’t the first time he humiliated me. But it was the first time he did it like this—confident, in front of his parents, like he thought there would be no consequences. And they just smiled. No shock. No shame. Like they’d been waiting for this.

I turned to walk toward my room, but Ryan grabbed my arm.

“You’re leaving today, Ava. Don’t make this ugly.”

And in that moment, something changed.

The anger faded. In its place came something colder. Clearer.

I leaned in, close enough that only he could hear me.