He Took Back Everything After His Fiancée Defended Her Daughter-eirian

The first thing Justin remembered later was the sound.

Not the shouting.

Not Vanessa’s voice.

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The sound of the phone hitting the wall.

It cracked through the living room like a dinner plate snapped over someone’s knee, bright and sharp and final.

For half a second, no one moved.

The house still smelled like garlic bread, lemon polish, and the expensive candle Vanessa liked to burn when her parents visited because she said it made the place feel finished.

Lunch plates sat abandoned on the dining table.

Iced tea sweated down tall glasses.

A basket of garlic bread rested beside a folded cloth napkin, the butter melting into dark yellow patches.

And on the hardwood floor, the iPhone Justin had given his son was scattered into pieces.

Noah stood three feet away from the wall, staring at the damage with his mouth slightly open.

He was old enough to understand humiliation.

He was still young enough to look at his father and hope adults would fix it.

Lily had already moved behind Justin’s leg.

She was smaller than Noah, quieter, and quicker to sense danger in a room.

Her hands clutched the denim at Justin’s thigh, not hard enough to hurt, but hard enough to tell him she was scared.

Brielle, Vanessa’s 14-year-old daughter, stood near the fireplace with her chin up and one hand on her hip.

She did not look guilty.

She looked insulted.

“I wanted the latest model,” she said. “Not his cheap one.”

The word cheap stayed in the room longer than the crash.

Justin looked at the pieces of glass near Noah’s shoes.

That phone had not been a throwaway gift.

It had been his own iPhone, carefully wiped clean, fitted with a new case, and handed to Noah after the boy spent three Saturdays helping him reorganize the garage.

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