Angela made a sharp sound. Daniel surged halfway up.
Rick lifted one hand. “Sit down.”
“You despise her because you think she wanted my money,” he said. “That would matter more if your lives weren’t built around it.”
Then he looked at Violet. “Your mother’s medical bills were paid by me for three years. Not by your aunt or uncle.”
“What?”
“Layla remains my wife.”
“The records are in my study. Along with everything else, including the way Daniel has been stealing from me and Angela has been firing my staff.”
Angela opened her mouth.
“Don’t speak.”
Then his eyes found mine. “Layla is the only person in this room who ever spoke to me like a man instead of a cash cow. She’ll be protected. Our marriage isn’t romantic, but it is based on respect and integrity.”
After they left, Violet found me crying in the hall.
“I thought you sold yourself,” she whispered.
I wiped my face. “You thought the worst of me very easily.”
“The records are in my study.”
Her mouth trembled. “I know.”
“You were my person,” I said. “And you made me feel cheap for trying to survive.”
Violet looked down. “I’m sorry, Layla.”
I believed her. I wasn’t ready to make her feel better.
Rick died four months later.
Daniel was removed from the company before the year ended. The records made silence impossible.
Angela lost her seat on the foundation board after two senior staff members backed up what Rick had documented. She stopped acting like the room was hers.
“I’m sorry, Layla.”
Violet came to see me a week later with red eyes and no excuses. She had read every bill, transfer, and note in Rick’s hand.
“I was wrong about you,” she said.
“Yes.”
She cried, but I didn’t. I was done begging people to choose me kindly.
A month later, I walked into the foundation office with my own key. No one smirked or asked why.