I returned home just in time to witness a scene I will never forget.
My father, wounded and weakened, advanced on his knees across the cold marble floor while my stepmother watched him with a cruel smile.
“Faster, Richard. If you want your medicine, you’ll have to earn it,” he said contemptuously.
Her voice was as cold as the expression of her son Marcus, who stood beside her wearing my father’s watch as if it were a war trophy.
They still believed I was the same vulnerable young woman who had left that house years before. They didn’t know I had returned, prepared to face them.
My father was holding a tray with a cup of tea. His hands were trembling so much that some of the liquid spilled onto the bandages covering his wrist.
Vivian burst out laughing.
“Pathetic,” she mocked, resting one of her heels on her shoulder. “Everyone used to respect you. Now you can’t even hold a cup.”
My father didn’t answer. Since the accident that almost cost him his life, his body was never the same. However, the physical pain was nothing compared to the humiliation he suffered every day.
I remained motionless in the entrance.
When Vivian saw me, she raised an eyebrow.
—Look who’s decided to come back.
Six years had passed since I left. Six years studying law, investigating corporate fraud, and learning to unmask people who hid their crimes behind a respectable facade.
I had returned after receiving an urgent message from my father’s nurse.
“You need to go back. Something terrible is happening.”
Now I understood those words perfectly.
Marcus was behind Vivian.
And on his wrist shone the watch that my father had worn for decades.
“Isabella…” my father murmured when he saw me. “You shouldn’t be here.”
Marcus is a river.
—Not even he believes you can do anything.
Vivian took a few steps forward.
“Your father made a smart decision. He transferred the house, the stocks, and all his accounts to us. He finally understood who really cares about him.”
Shame flooded my father’s face.
I left my suitcase on the floor.
—Was it really your decision?
Vivian’s smile disappeared for a moment.
-Be careful.
—Or would you prefer we talk about the signatures obtained while I was medicated?
The silence became absolute.
Marcus advanced with a threatening gesture.
—You’d better shut your mouth.
I ignored him.