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For eight months she had performed kindness flawlessly. Charity galas. Hospital visits. Warm smiles whenever cameras were present. In public she called my mother “Mama Elena,” then sent expensive designer scarves afterward. I had mistaken that performance for class. I had mistaken it for compassion.
“You should apologize,” I said.
Vanessa blinked.
“To my mother.”
Her smile stiffened.
There it was.
No fear.
I could have exploded. I could have thrown her out. The younger version of me certainly would have. The boy who once fought in basement rings, breaking his knuckles for cash to pay chemotherapy bills, still existed beneath the tailored suit.
But I wasn’t that boy anymore.
So I smiled.
Vanessa mistook it for surrender.
Relief settled across her face.
She recognized that voice.
It was the same voice I used before stepping into cages where men twice my size laughed at me.
They always laughed first.
They never laughed last.
Part 2
Vanessa spent the following week behaving as though she had already won.
She drifted through wedding rehearsals, menu tastings, and champagne brunches with the confidence of a queen preparing to inherit a throne. Her mother, Celeste, made constant jokes about “new money.” Her father loudly asked my CFO whether my company’s valuation represented “real money or internet money.”
I smiled through every insult.
Vanessa seemed to enjoy that most of all.
“You’re so sweet when you’re quiet,” she whispered one evening while adjusting my tie at a donor dinner. “That’s why this works. I handle people. You build your little apps.”
“My little apps paid for this room,” I replied.
She kissed my cheek for the cameras.
“Exactly.”
Across the ballroom, my mother sat by herself, wearing the pearl earrings I bought after my company’s first profitable quarter.
Vanessa had intentionally placed her near the emergency exit.
Far from investors.
Far from photographers.
Far from the family table.
When I asked why, Vanessa sighed dramatically.
“Adrian, don’t be sensitive. Your mother gets tired. I’m protecting her.”
Protecting her.
I excused myself and stepped into the hallway.
My head of security, Malik, was waiting there.
“You were right,” he said, handing me a tablet.
The screen displayed footage from the bridal boutique.
With audio.
Vanessa’s insult.
The kick.
My mother’s fall.
The lie afterward.
Every second was crystal clear.
“There’s more,” Malik added. “Staff signed statements. Not just from that day.”
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