I sank into her leather chair.
Jocelyn hadn’t known anything. She’d just found the card (probably when it fell out of a box during the move) and decided to use it. A guess. A cruel, clever guess.
All that time, I’d been terrified: of her, of what she might know, of what she might say. Meanwhile, she knew nothing.
The fear that had been wrapped around my chest for weeks began to loosen. In its place, something colder took root. Something deliberate.
I placed the postcard back exactly as I’d found it.
Then my eyes fell on a small silver key on the desk — the keychain engraved with her initials. I turned it over in my palm and smiled.
Five minutes later, her car was parked neatly on the next street over, tucked behind a row of hydrangeas where she’d never think to look. Sweet revenge.
By the time I slipped back into my kitchen, the party was still going strong. I smoothed my hair and walked out into the garden.
“Ladies! I think the party’s over.”
The laughter died instantly. Jocelyn turned, startled.
“You heard me. I’m done.”
“Alicia, maybe you should—”
“No! You should. You should tell them the truth — how you waved a piece of my past in my face without knowing what it really meant.”
The garden went still. A couple of women exchanged looks, but no one spoke. My throat was dry, but the words were finally ready to come out.
“You want to know the truth?” I asked, turning to all of them now. “That name in the pie — the one your friend Jocelyn used to blackmail me — belongs to my ex-husband. A man who made my life hell for fifteen years. A man who still sends threats, even after the restraining order. The kind of man who would ignore the law and find me if he ever discovered where I am.”
Someone gasped softly. Jocelyn’s mouth parted, but I didn’t give her a chance to speak.
“I came here because I wanted to start over, to breathe again without looking over my shoulder. And because I’m trying… I’m trying to have a child. To build a life that isn’t poisoned by fear. That’s all I wanted — quiet mornings, a garden, a safe place to become a mother.”
A murmur rippled through the group. At that moment, Jocelyn looked small. She glanced at the women around her, searching for support, but found only cold stares and folded arms.
“Jocelyn…” one of them said quietly, “that’s… that’s not okay.”
“Who does that?” another muttered. “That’s cruel.”
And just like that, the space around her shifted. The polite laughter, the eager smiles — gone. One by one, friends stepped away from her, murmuring short, awkward goodbyes as they passed me.
“I’m so sorry,” one woman whispered, touching my arm gently before she left.
“None of us knew,” said another. “I hope you find peace here.”
Jocelyn stood frozen in the middle of the yard. “I… I didn’t know,” she stammered, but no one was listening anymore.
I walked toward the house and closed the door behind me. The silence that filled the garden was different now.
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