I woke at 3 AM to the sound of the newborn shrieking and moved quietly toward the nursery, only to find her husband ya:nking her back by the hair while she reached des:perately for the crib. “Let him cry, you need to learn your lesson for burning my dinner,” he whispered sadistically, never realizing I was already standing in the doorway with my phone recording every second.The baby’s cry ripped through the house at 3:07 AM like a warning siren in the dark. By the time I arrived at the nursery, my phone was already filming, and my son-in-law’s hand was tangled cr:uelly in my daughter’s hair.Mia kn:elt beside the rocking chair, one arm straining toward the crib where little Noah screamed r:ed-faced beneath a shaking mobile. Her husband, Caleb Voss, bent over her with a smile that turned my blood to ice.
“Let him cry,” he whispered. “You need to learn your lesson for burning my dinner.”Mia swallowed a sob. “Caleb, please. He’s hungry.”“He can wait.”I remained in the doorway barefoot and silent, my thumb steady against the screen.Caleb noticed me three seconds later.is expression shifted at once. The monster disappeared. The polished real-estate prince returned, all gentle voice and injured pride.“Eleanor,” he said, letting go of Mia so abruptly she nearly collapsed. “This isn’t what it looks like.”I entered the room and picked Noah up from the crib. His tiny body trembled against me.“It looks like exactly what it is.”Caleb gave a quiet laugh. “You don’t understand marriage. Mia gets dramatic. She’s tired. Emotional. You know how new mothers are.”Mia stared down at the carpet, shaking.I knew that tone. Not from Caleb, but from his father, Richard Voss, at charity dinners. Men like them dressed cruelty in polished shoes and luxury watches. They only shouted behind locked doors. They only struck where marks could be hiddenCaleb’s gaze dropped to my phone.“Delete that.”“No.”His smile narrowed. “Careful, Eleanor. You’re living in my guest room.”I rocked Noah gently once, then again. “Your guest room?”