“Get out of here.
Chapter 1
“Get out of here.
I didn’t invite you.”
The dining room went silent so fast that Eleanor Hayes could hear the small flame of Chloe’s birthday candles trembling on the cake.
For one full second, Eleanor thought she had misheard.
She stood beside the long walnut dining table she had bought twenty-two years ago with her late husband, Henry. Her right hand rested on the back of the empty chair at the end. Her left hand still smelled faintly of garlic, butter, and lemon because she had been cooking since seven that morning.
The apron over her cream blouse was stained with gravy and flour. Her knees ached. Her back throbbed. Her fingers were red from washing dishes in hot water because Chloe insisted the dishwasher “left spots on the crystal.”
But she had not complained.
Not when Chloe changed the menu three times.
Not when Dan, Eleanor’s only son, walked past the kitchen
and said, “Mom, can you just help Chloe today? It’s her birthday.”
Not when Chloe’s friends arrived and mistook Eleanor for hired help.
Not even when Chloe sat at the head of Eleanor’s table, in Eleanor’s chair, raising a glass of wine beneath Eleanor’s chandelier like she had always belonged there.
All Eleanor had wanted was to sit down for one minute.
Just one minute.
Her legs were shaking.
She looked at Chloe. “I’m sorry?”
Chloe Hayes smiled, but it was not the kind of smile that warmed a room. It was polished, controlled, and sharp around the edges. She wore an emerald satin dress, gold earrings, and the kind of confidence that came from knowing everyone was watching.
“I said,” Chloe repeated, louder this time, “this is my birthday dinner. I didn’t invite you to sit with us. Please step outside.”
A woman near the cake lowered her wine
glass.
Another guest pretended to check her phone.
Eleanor turned her eyes to Dan.
Her son sat beside Chloe in a navy shirt, shoulders stiff, fork frozen above his plate. For a moment, his eyes met hers, and Eleanor saw the little boy he used to be—the child who once ran into her arms after school, the teenager who cried in her kitchen after his first heartbreak, the young man who promised at Henry’s funeral, “I’ll take care of you, Mom.”
But that boy was gone.
Dan looked down.
Eleanor’s throat tightened. “Dan?”
He rubbed his thumb against the edge of his napkin. “Mom, don’t make a scene.”
The words hit harder than Chloe’s insult.
A scene.
She had cooked the food. She had set the table. She had opened her home. She had paid for the flowers, the cake, the wine, and even the emerald earrings Chloe was wearing
because Dan said money was “tight this month.”
And now she was the scene.
Chloe leaned back in Eleanor’s chair. “You’ve been in and out of the kitchen all evening. People are uncomfortable.”
Eleanor blinked. “Uncomfortable?”
“Yes.” Chloe tilted her head with fake sympathy. “You hover. You fuss. You make everything about yourself.”
A few guests stared at their plates.
Eleanor looked around the room. These people had eaten her food, praised her roast chicken, asked for more potatoes, and laughed under her roof. Now not one of them said a word.
Her hand tightened around the chair.
“This is my house,” Eleanor said softly.
Chloe’s expression hardened. “Technically, you keep saying that, but Dan and I live here now too.”
“You live here because I let you.”
Dan exhaled sharply. “Mom, please.”
That word—please—was not for her protection. It was for Chloe’s comfort.
Chloe placed one manicured hand over Dan’s. “See? This is exactly what I told you. She keeps using the house to control us.”
Eleanor stared at her son. “Is that what you think?”
Dan did not answer.
The silence was answer enough.
Chloe turned to the guests, her voice sweet and practiced. “Please forgive her. Older people get confused sometimes. It’s been hard since she retired.”
A hot wave of humiliation rose into Eleanor’s face.
Confused.
Retired.
Old.
Words meant to make her small.
Eleanor looked at the table again. The crystal glasses had belonged to her mother. The silver serving spoons came from Henry’s family. The embroidered napkins were sewn by Eleanor herself the first Christmas after she and Henry bought the house.
Every inch of this room held her life.
But Chloe had filled it with strangers and called Eleanor an inconvenience.
Eleanor slowly removed her hand from the chair.
Her fingers trembled, but her voice did not.
“I see.”
Chloe smiled, thinking she had won. “Thank you. You can wait in the kitchen until we need dessert served.”
That was when something inside Eleanor went still.
Not broken.
Still.
For months, she had let things slide.
The guest bedroom became Chloe’s “office.” The garage became Dan’s storage. The pantry was reorganized without asking. Henry’s reading chair disappeared into the basement because Chloe said it made the living room look “dated.”
Eleanor had told herself family required patience.
She told herself Dan was stressed.
She told herself Chloe would soften.
But tonight, in front of a birthday cake Eleanor paid for, under a roof Eleanor owned, beside a chair Eleanor was apparently not allowed to sit in, the truth finally stood in front of her.
They were not asking for help.
They were taking over.
And worse—Dan was letting it happen.
Eleanor untied her apron slowly. The room watched. Chloe’s smile faded just a little.
“What are you doing?” Chloe asked.
Eleanor folded the stained apron once, then twice, and laid it neatly on the edge of the table.
“I’m stepping outside,” Eleanor said.
Chloe lifted her chin. “Good.”
Eleanor looked at Dan one last time. “Remember that you chose this moment.”
Dan frowned. “Mom, what does that mean?”
But Eleanor did not answer.
She walked past the guests, past the birthday balloons taped to her dining room wall, past the framed photograph of Henry smiling beside her on their thirtieth anniversary.
At the front hall, she picked up her purse from the side table.
Inside it was a small envelope from Caldwell & Reed Attorneys.
A letter she had planned to discuss with Dan after dinner.
A letter about the house.
A letter about ownership, inheritance, and the legal notice Dan and Chloe had not yet seen.
Eleanor opened the front door.
Behind her, Chloe laughed too loudly, pretending the insult had never happened.
Eleanor stepped into the cold night air and closed the door gently behind her.
Then she pulled out her phone and called the one person Dan had always been afraid she would call.
“Mr. Reed,” she said when the lawyer answered. “I’m ready now.”
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