Tall. Dark-haired. Faded denim jacket hanging loose off broad shoulders, like he'd borrowed it from someone bigger and kept it anyway. His eyes swept the yard in one practiced scan-the peeling paint, the sagging gutter, the cracked porch step David still hadn't fixed. He catalogued it all in under three seconds, the way a general maps a battlefield before the first shot is fired.
Then he smiled.
It happened so fast Karyn nearly missed it. A flawless, sunlit smile, aimed directly at David, who was already halfway down the porch steps with his arms half-open, practically vibrating with the joy of his own generosity. The smile transformed the boy's face from cold and calculating to impossibly warm.
It was the most perfect thing Karyn had ever seen.
It was also completely fake.
She recognized it the way she recognized the sound of a lock clicking-something designed specifically to keep people out.
Behind the screen door, Karyn crossed her arms and didn't move.
David shook the social worker's hand with both of his. Loud, eager. The manila folder passed between them, thick with someone else's pain condensed into paperwork. David's expression arranged itself into practiced sympathy, and Karyn watched him nod along to whatever the woman was whispering, his face doing the emotional work he was so good at performing.
The boy-Jadyn, the folder would say, Jadyn Vaughan-grabbed a frayed duffel from the backseat and slung it over his shoulder. The worn strap bit into his collarbone. A single line appeared between his brows. Gone in a blink.
David reached for the bag. "Let me help you with that, son."
"No, thank you, sir." Jadyn's voice was soft as a confession. "I can manage. You've already done so much just by having me here."
David's chest visibly expanded.
The social worker drove away.
And the moment Jadyn's foot hit the top porch step, his eyes found Karyn standing in the shadows. She hadn't moved. Hadn't offered a smile or a word or a single inch of warmth.
He looked right at her and smiled again-that same blinding, hollow smile-and something cold moved through Karyn's chest like a key turning in ice.
She gave him one stiff nod and stepped aside to let him pass.
She did not say welcome.
Dinner that night was a performance in three acts.
Sharon had made fried chicken. David slid the entire platter directly in front of Jadyn before anyone else had unfolded their napkins.
Karyn watched Korey's eyes track the food. Her little brother was eight years old, perpetually underfed, and his immune system was about as reliable as the Mathis house's hot water heater.
She reached across the table and dragged the platter to Korey without a word.
David's face went red. "Karyn. Where are your manners? He is our guest."
Before the scene could escalate, Jadyn reached out with his fork and speared the smallest, most burnt piece of chicken on the edge of the plate. He did it slowly, deliberately, making sure everyone saw.
"It's okay, Mr. Mathis," he said, his voice carrying that perfectly calibrated rasp-the sound of a boy who had learned not to ask for too much. "Korey should have it. I'm just happy to be at a real dinner table."
Sharon made a small, wounded sound in the back of her throat.
David's anger dissolved into adoration.
Karyn gripped her fork until her knuckles ached. Across the table, Jadyn chewed his burned chicken with absolute patience, watching her over the rim of his water glass.
His eyes were flat. Satisfied.
The first shot had been fired, and he hadn't even raised his voice.