Pregnant Widow Sent to the Garage Learns Daniel Left One Final Order-rosocute

At 5:06 a.m. on Thanksgiving morning, Olivia Carter learned exactly how cold a house could feel before anyone opened a door.

The kitchen was warm by the thermostat, warm by the oven light, warm by the coffee maker blinking beside the sink.

Still, the room felt frozen around her.

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Her phone rang against the counter beside a mug of coffee that had already gone cold.

Outside, snow moved across the window in thin white sheets, tapping softly at the glass whenever the wind shifted.

Olivia stood barefoot on the tile in Daniel Carter’s old Marine Corps hoodie, one hand resting on the curve of her pregnant stomach.

Eight months had passed since the funeral.

Eight months since she had stood under a gray sky while uniformed men folded a flag with frightening precision.

Eight months since she had heard someone say Daniel was gone and felt the sentence strike her like a language she would never learn to understand.

The phone kept ringing.

The screen said Victoria.

Her younger sister never called that early unless she wanted something.

Olivia answered anyway, because grief had not yet taught her how to stop hoping family might become family when it mattered.

“Mom and Dad need the guest rooms,” Victoria said.

No hello.

No Happy Thanksgiving.

No soft question about the baby.

“Move your things into the garage for a few days.”

Olivia blinked at the window.

“The garage?” she asked.

Victoria gave a small impatient breath, the kind she had used since childhood whenever Olivia moved too slowly for her taste.

“Yes, Olivia. The garage. Ryan needs your bedroom for his remote office, and Mom already said the guest rooms are spoken for.”

Olivia looked toward the hallway that led to the bedroom she still thought of as hers and Daniel’s.

His sweatshirt lay folded over the chair in there.

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