and left for dead after a charity gala. The woman responsible, Keyla Di
wyer, was defending Keyla. He tore my mother's reputation apart,
hing across her face. That night, in our cold mansion, I confronted him. "How could yo
sealed medical records, her history of depression, to paint her as unstable and s
w he was trying to erase me. But as I signed the divorce papers he had prepared, a wild, despera
pte
making everything feel cold and unreal. I stared at the woman in the
dry eyes with a
her voice trembling just enough. "She
ears caring for others, wouldn't hurt a fly. She had accidentally spilled a
ered my mom in a quiet hallway. They did
when the doctors found the poison. A slow-act
ed murder, pla
formance. And the man directing this whole circus, the o
son G
sympathy for his client. He was the founder of the city's top law firm, a man known
just fe
gic accident, a misunderstanding escalated by f
an a physical blow. I felt
ame quickly.
hing across her face for a split second before
world dissolving into a dull roar
him in the living room when he came home. He loosened his tie, his movements f
he said, hi
I finally choked
and poured himself a scotch. "Keyla
screamed, my control finally snap
over the rim of the glass. The warmth I once loved in
d calmly. "Your mother's... condition mad
on? You mean the com
ick. "I'm talking about her medical
her briefcase on the t
you talk
oming intimate, conspiratorial. "Treated for it years ago. It wouldn't be hard for a
ng in the air, the imp
ory, to paint her as mentally ill to protect
my face, hot and fur
oncern that I now recognized as completely false. "Of cour
h my cheek, and I flin
lawyer then. He had pursued me for two years, relentless and charming. My mothe
ed, the words tasting like ash. "I stood by you whe
red, his voice losing its gentle edge. "Th
ound. "You did this for you, Garrison
amily is powerful. Making them an enemy would de
like a weapon. "Drop it, Janette. Don't file
e my mother's sealed medical records? You'll tell the wor
his voice low and dangerous. "For your
private pains against her, against me. He wo
ved with all my heart. He was a stranger. A monster
a cold, heavy despair. I nodded slowly, u
sfaction crossed his face. He walked ov
y shoulder. His touch was cold. "It will all be
the same. The love I had for him was dying, being re
ow," he said, his voice casual again. "Just
n't a
continued, not needing a response. "Get
essive silence. I looked around at the opulent house, at the life
to the bone, that I had to get out. But not