That night, after everyone left, my family stayed behind. We sat at the kitchen table of Horizon House eating simple leftovers Daniel had picked up—sandwiches, chips, something normal.

No one mentioned the mansion.

No one compared.

Dad talked about the students. Daniel talked about work. Aunt Margaret talked about expanding the program. And my mom—my mother—asked me a question she’d never asked in my entire life without attaching a judgment to it.

“How are you, Vanessa?” she said softly. “Like… really.”

I looked at her, felt the room quiet in a different way than it ever had at those old dinners.

And I smiled.

Not the tight smile I used to wear for survival.

A real one.

“I’m good,” I said. “I’m happy. I’m… finally home in my own life.”

Mom nodded, eyes shining, and she didn’t try to make the moment about her. She just let it be mine.

When I drove away later, I passed Daniel’s old mansion without looking at it, because it didn’t deserve my attention anymore.

What deserved my attention were the porch lights.

Three steady glows on a street that once made me feel invisible.

Proof that the ending wasn’t a revenge scene.

It was a life—solid, quiet, and completely mine.

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